1995-02-11: Celtic 2-2 Hibernian. Premier Division

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The Herald (Glasgow)

February13, 1995

Hooydonk turns the tables on scribes

BYLINE:Ian Paul

Dutch striker, Pierre van Hooydonk, demonstrated at the weekend that he can manoeuvre just as smartly off the field as he does on it.
Producing a neat reverse turn, he brought a new dimension to after-match chat when he interviewed the press. The troops were a bit taken aback. Pierre, WE ask the questions.

The Dutchman, like most of his countrymen, is a deep thinker about the game and was concerned to discover ifCeltichad changed in the time since he joined the club. "You saw them before I came. Is it any better?" The answer has to be in the affirmative, but no-one gave him the impression his new team had reached a new plane yet.The tall man who played for Breda is clearly anxious to make an impression, but is even more interested in seeing the Parkhead team establishing a style that suits his own way of playing. For van Hooydonk, the problem his height presents is a presumption that he is an aerial player, a kind of Dutch Mark Hateley.
"Do you see a difference in the way we are playing now?" he asked. "I thought we played the best football since I came here. At first the team sent long balls into me, but my best quality is on the ground. I think now we are playing more one-twos, more football."
Van Hooydonk, brought up to play the thinking man's game in the Dutch style, was frustrated in the second half when his team, leading 2-1, continued to push for a third goal.
"In Holland, if we are 2-1 up we keep the ball, we go backward if there is no -one to play the ball ahead to, butCelticgo forward, and then go forward again and again. All it needs a is a half chance and it is 2-2, which is what happened.
"I like to play the Dutch way, but maybe I need to change my ways. The only right way is the winning way."
Hooydonk has a soul-mate in John Collins, who plays the game as he likes it and thinks on the same wavelength, but the Dutchman is also impressed by the young players coming into the big team.
His own ambitions lie in gettingCelticinto Europe. "I could have played 100 years with Breda and not played in Europe. WithCelticI hope to get there soon. We still have chances this season, in the Scottish Cup and the league."
Hooydonk, having held his own chat show with the pencil brigade, then held court with a gaudily bedecked group of Breda fans who had made the journey to see their old favourite in action. He had a busy day.
His contribution on the field was considerable in a game which was dominated by a man who has been around the Scottish scene a great deal longer. Jim Leighton, the Hibs goalie, pulled of a handful of wonderful saves, but nothing he did was better than the attempt at halting Collins' opening goal.
Hooydonk had taken a tremendous pass from Peter Grant and then laid on a perfect ball for Collins, who hit it firmly and accurately for the net. Leighton's diving touch deserved a better fate than the ball going in off the post.
Collins had his best game for some time, but the outstandingCelticman yet again was defender Brian O'Neil, even if he and Mark McNally found young Kevin Harper's incisive pace difficult to contain at times.
The 18-year-old might well have had a memorable day if he had converted two golden opportunities but, while manager Alex Miller was disappointed at those misses, he made the reasonable point that the teenager was bound to make this kind of error as he goes through the learning process. "I think the main point about him is that he did not look out of place and causedCelticplenty of problems."
Celticmanager Tommy Burns, who brought in Brian McLaughlin in preference to team captain Paul McStay, was full of praise for the Parkhead fans. "I thought the supporters showed patience when they saw the team trying to play football."
If any player had a special point to make it was Hibs' Pat McGinlay, who was transferred back to Hibs by Burns. The midfield man got his message across with a fine day's work, including a well-taken goal that levelled the scores after Collins' opener.
Willie Falconer did the next trick forCeltic, when he headed in the second goal from a Collins cross, but the man who got most enjoyment out of scoring had yet to make his appearance.
Mark McGraw, who replaced Joe Tortolano, scored a goal that meant much more to him than any of the others, however satisfying it might have been for them. The son of Morton manager Allan, McGraw was scoring only his second goal of the season and needed it to further his claim for a first-team place.
"The club has the best set of strikers on the staff since I came here and it makes it very comeptitive. I am just glad to get a chance," he said. "It is important that I take any goal opportunities that come my way."
His previous goal, against Partick Thistle, also came when he was a substitute. "I had one touch before I scored that day, this time I had two, and gave the ball away each time."
McGraw's contract ends this summer and he knows he has to make the most of any opportunities either to be given a new one or to attract interest from elsewhere.

The Scotsman
February13, 1995, Monday
Back to the drawing board

BYLINE:By Hugh Keevins

THE debilitating effect of draws for bothCelticand Hibs was best summarised by Darren Jackson."They have crippled our season," said the Hibs forward after playing his part in a match which restored the onlookers' faith in the much-maligned Scottish game, but was, ironically, mutually destructive for the teams providing the spectacle.
"Draws are the reason why Hibs won't win the championship," said Jackson.
Hampden brought Hibs their 13th draw of the season.Celtichave had 15.

Rangers are the major beneficiaries of this addiction to sharing the points.Hibs' away record provides a revealing reason for their second place in the league table, being proof only of there being a championship within a championship.
Alex Miller's side have yet to win a game outside Edinburgh, with their only victory away from Easter Road being against Hearts at Tynecastle. Thirty goals at home and only six away tell their own story.
Yet the manager's alleged obsession with caution was shown to be a transparent nonsense againstCeltic.
Hibs had Kevin Harper and Keith Wright up front with Pat McGinlay and Jackson supporting them from the midfield.
The side scored twice and could have won the game had Harper not missed the easiest chance of the afternoon.
Jackson's frustration, though, caused him to say he felt partly responsible for not having done enough to prevent the fifth draw of the last seven league meetings of the two clubs.
"Pat scored, but I didn't get forward enough and Michael Weir and Joe Tortolano failed to get in the kind of crosses they were asked to provide," he said.
"If we had been truly positive, we would have done better than that. I believe we are a good side. I am only disappointed we didn't show it againstCeltic."
Nevertheless, Hibs retained their four-point lead over Tommy Burns's team and Jackson will today be named in Scotland's B international squad for the game against Northern Ireland next week.
Celtic'sBrian O'Neil will also be given international recognition for the first time since his manager converted him from a passable midfield player into a central defender of enormous potential.
Burns's judgment has been called into question by supporters, but he has unearthed young talent atCelticPark, such as Stuart Gray and Brian Mc- Laughlin, and re-routing O'Neil could turn out to be his smartest move.
For the second week in succession, however, points were deniedCelticbecause of a lack of understanding between the goalkeeper, Pat Bonner, and Mark McNally.
The defender conceded what looked like a needless corner kick while waiting for the Irishman to come off his line.
The corner kick fell to Mark McGraw's foot and he shot through a packed penalty area to end the game in the four-letter word that has become synonymous with both sides.
Burns said though, remains convinced that hisCelticteam are not far away from being taken more seriously in the context of the championship.
Burns said: "We could have won six of our 15 drawn games.
The team are getting nearer to the way I want them to play. The supporters are judging us on a game-to-game basis instead of looking further into the future.
These things take time."
Time is not in most plentiful supply whereCelticare concerned, though, and the bravery of Burns's decision to drop Paul McStay is a quality he may need to display at other times.
The manager refuses to be rushed, in spite of supporters clamourings, into buying new players in the meantime.
"You can spend time looking at prospective signings and then decide after three or four visits that the one you were watching is not necessarily the type you want," he said.
Verdict: Rangers are unopposed in the Premier Division and a blanket could be thrown around a number of other sides behind them.
The analogy is not misplaced since suffocation was the championship theme brought to mind by this match.


Scotland on Sunday
February12, 1995, Sunday
Lights out onCelticagain

BYLINE:Kevin Mccarra

CELTIC'Sdrawn match with Hibs led an endangered life. It had to survive a pitch inspection and on two occasions the floodlights fizzled out. The game, too, was a racy affair, but its power supply was constant. Sparks flew from the opening seconds when Willie Falconer might have scored and if invention did fail there was always some galumphing defending to maintain the excitement.Tommy Burns would surely prefer dullness and a great deal more authority from his team on their own ground. They twice led yesterday, but eventually failed to add to their skinny total of six victories in the league. No matter howCelticsquirm to try and justify themselves they continue to be pinned by the statistics.

The manager surely knows that he will face unrest from the crowd. The brief boo at full-time can easily grow in volume and duration. If the selection againstHibernianis anything to go by, Burns's own tolerance is on the wane. For the second time this season Paul McStay was dropped and on this occasion there was no place for him even on the bench. The midfielder did have an ankle injury which prevented him from training at the beginning of the week, but Burns shunned the easy alibi, saying, "I picked a specific team with this game in mind."Since Brian McLaughlin is virtuallyCeltic'sonly means of turning defences, a midfield player had to stand down to make way for him and the manager went on to praise each of the men he did choose to retain in that area.
Perhaps too much will be made of the omission of McStay, who is in his testimonial year and coming to the end of his contract. No doubt the 30-year- old is perfectly capable of forcing his way back into the side.
His absence, though, did identify a readiness on Burns's part to draw a line under the old certainties at the club. ACelticside which one day wins a trophy will surely bear only a faint resemblance to the current selection.
Burns has been amassing the air miles of late as he attempts to find new signings, but some of these targets badly need to touch down in his team. The manager called for patience as he introduces youngsters, butCelticare the sort of club who will never be allowed to remain in embryonic condition for long.
Yesterday's 11 did manufacture enough chances to win the game and were foiled mainly by the lasting spryness of the Premier Division's most elderly goalkeeper. Even so, Hibs, while being much less expansive, always looked capable of reducing theCelticdefence to bedlam when an equaliser was called for. The managers, however, should be left to get on with their recriminations while everyone else relishes the memory of an excellent game.
Hibs have not won a league match outside Edinburgh since March of last year, but Alex Miller did restore Kevin Harper to the starting line-up on the return to a ground where he had shown such brio early in the season. Understandably, though, the teenager has still to acquire the cool head needed to complement the fiery pace he possesses and which can easily outstrip most Scottish defences.
Just as in September's fixture, Harper had some flabbergasting misses. His sheer speed took him into the space behind the defence but the glaring nature of the opportunities seemed to unnerve him. In four minutes he reached Darren Jackson's through ball and, in lifting it over Pat Bonner, took himself away from the target. Straining to finish from an angle he scuffed his shot and gave Brian O'Neil a chance to clear.
In the middle of the second half, as Hibs lagged 2-1 behind, a Mickey Weir head-flick and a touch by Keith Wright again put Harper clear.
This time a dreadful shank of a finish sent the ball spinning yards too wide.
Despite such alarms,Celticoften suggested that they might outscore their own frailties. In the first minute Pierre van Hooijdonk's chested pass sent Falconer into the area, but he could not contrive the elevation to prevent Jim Leighton's sprawl from blocking his effort. None the less,Celticwere ahead five minutes later.
On this occasion van Hooijdonk gathered Peter Grant's pass on the right. Hibs still appeared to outnumber the opposition inside the penalty area but the Dutchman's low cross was perfect, singling out John Collins whose first-time shot, in the oily conditions, slipped from Leighton's hands, after an excellent save, and bumped off the post to roll over the line.
Celtic, however, and for the umpteenth time this season, failed to take control and Brian O'Neil had already headed out from under his own bar before Hibs forced the equaliser in 29 minutes.
Willie Miller pushed the ball into the right of the area where Pat McGinlay, unmolested by defenders, had run. The shot, taken early, swept through the space at Bonner's right hand.
McGinlay, after a season of discontent withCeltic, must have relished a little retribution, but it did not dismay his old colleagues.
Even before the interval Leighton had made remarkable saves from Willie Falconer and Tom Boyd, but could not prevent the ball being forced past him three minutes into the second half. Grant worked play out of a tight corner on the right and Collins crossed for Falconer to bury a tidy header at the near post. Leighton made another fine block, from Phil O'Donnell, in 69 minutes andCelticwere denied the reassurance of the third goal they have been coveting all season.
Instead, substitute Mark McGraw struck another equaliser for Hibs, forcing a shot through a congested area after a corner had come back out to him.
Celtic'sability to avoid victory had proved as refined as ever.