Why Celtic might alter the game plan to combat Livingston 'heebee-jeebies'
The fixture that gives the Celtic support the heebee-jeebies more than any other, it is little wonder. Celtic haven’t won in West Lothian across the four seasons Livingston have been back in the top flight, a period that leaves them five such games without a victory. Postecoglou’s men are on a 27-match domestic unbeaten run. It just so happens their last defeat came, you’ve guessed it, on their last trek along the M8 to Almondvale, with a 1-0 loss in mid-September. Livingston, now fourth and in their best form of the campaign, followed that up by holding Celtic to a scoreless draw in Glasgow at the end of October. The upshot of those two outcomes is that David Martindale’s men are the only Scottish side Postecoglou hasn’t registered a win over. McGregor is well aware of his club’s problems against Livingston. Indeed, a sense has developed that their plastic pitch has created some sort of psychological block for those in Celtic colours.
“We have kind of struggled to pick up results, especially away, so we just try to implement the game model that we want,” said the midfielder. “We will look at it over the next couple of days, anticipate what they will do, and try to come up with a gameplan to beat that.”
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe likelihood is that the requirement for Postecoglou’s side to end their hoodoo will involve countering what, in modern football parlance, is known as the low block. Celtic’s Premiership games have fallen into a similar pattern of late as opponents have adopted that tactic. St Mirren did so at Parkhead in midweek, keeping their hosts at bay until the points were claimed with two second goals Martindale’s men are the past masters of the approach.
“We try and play a type of football that requires patience sometimes,” the Celtic captain said..” When you get teams that come and sit low, it is hard to break down. You have to keep moving the ball and keep shifting it side to side to try and find that opening to get you a goal. It can come from a set play, it can come from a mistake or whatever. You’ve just got to be ready to take the chance.
“That’s our game. We want to pin teams in and make it hard for them to defend till we get that opening. But it does require patience. It’s going to be a nervy run-in towards the end. It’s just about the players and everybody staying calm and trusting what has got us this far. It works, so we stay calm and keep doing the right things. And hope we will do enough to get there.”
Get a year of unlimited access to all The Scotsman's sport coverage without the need for a full subscription. Expert analysis of the biggest games, exclusive interviews, live blogs, transfer news and 70 per cent fewer ads on Scotsman.com - all for less than £1 a week. Subscribe to us today
Comments
Want to join the conversation? Please or to comment on this article.