Away fan ban âa Rangers thingâ â Celticâs Rodgers
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Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers has described the continued absence of away fans at Old Firm derbies as âa Rangers thing, not a Celtic-Rangers thingâ.
Rangers announced on Wednesday that there would no away tickets for Celticâs January Scottish Premiership visit after their city rivals decided not to allocate them for the September match at Celtic Park.
The Scottish Professional Football League has since talked to the clubs and been told that both will provide ticket allocations of about 5% of stadium capacity for away supporters for Old Firm derbies later in the season â provided necessary works are completed at both grounds.
But Rodgers and Celtic have explained that their decision for the September game was based on the uncertainty over when Rangers will return to Ibrox, after delays to renovation works to their Copland Stand forced a temporary move to Hampden Park.
âCeltic have played their part in what they were asked to do,â he said. âWhen you go back to when this all started, it had nothing to do with Celtic.
âCeltic get dragged into this here as being a Celtic-Rangers thing. Itâs not a Celtic-Rangers thing, this is a Rangers thing.
âWhen asked to have this agreement, make the stadium safe, we plough money into that, that started months ago. On both parties, that hasnât been agreed, so itâs not complicated, it hasnât been done.â
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Published2 days ago
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Published1 day ago
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Rangers ended the long-standing convention of allowing 7,500 Celtic fans into Ibrox in 2018, reducing the allocation to about 10% of that total, with Celtic following suit.
Eventually, neither club accepted tickets for each otherâs grounds for safety reasons, but an agreement had been reached in March between the SPFL and the two clubs to reintroduce away fans.
Given the size of the respective stadiums, about 2,500 Celtic fans would have been able to visit Ibrox, with 3,000 Rangers supporters for games at Celtic Park.
âThe agreement hasnât been upheld, so Celtic rightly have to defend their supporters and their club and, sadly, the Rangers supporters miss out in this game and the Celtic supporters in the return game,â Rodgers said.
âI think the board have made a really, really good decision. The clubâs job is to protect the support and if there is not that guarantee come the second fixture then I think it is only logical that you wouldnât reciprocate.â
Rangers on Wednesday said they would not provide Celtic fans with tickets for the January fixture after being informed of their rivalsâ decision for the September game.
âThe allocation to be implemented by both clubs was clear and Rangers was taking all steps towards fulfilling that agreement,â Rangers stated on their website.
âIn the meantime, we can confirm that no away allocation will apply for the January Old Firm fixture at Ibrox. This is consistent with the reciprocity embedded in the agreement reached between the clubs and the SPFL.â
Manager Philippe Clement said that, as he was not involved with the decisions, he could not comment other than to say that it is âalways better for the productâ if two sets of fans are in attendance.
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Published18 June 2023
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