Aston Villa, Everton and several other Premier League clubs appear to be interested in signing the Celtic superstar.
Celtic face Hibernian in the Scottish Gas Scottish Cup quarter-final tomorrow (March 9), kicking off at 3pm. Join us at Paradise as the Hoops look to book their place in the Hampden semi-final.
CELTIC and Hibs will go head-to-head this afternoon with a place in the last four of the Scottish Cup on the line. Brendan Rodgers will know it won’t be an easy task against a side that beat
Liam Scales misses out for Celtic with a facial injury but Auston Trusty and Callum McGregor are fit after going off with injuries against St Mirren. James Forrest is building up his fitness after a foot injury, while Paulo Bernardo will return from an ankle injury after the international break. Hibs captain Joe Newell remains on the sidelines.
Celtic face Hibernian in the Scottish Gas Scottish Cup Quarter Final on Sunday. The holders host the visitors from Edinburgh, who are bringing 7,000 supporters to Glasgow’s East End. David Gray’s side beat Celtic when the teams met last month at Easter Road but Celtic will be keen to burst the Hibs bubble.
Irish side Clovers ensure a second-place Celtic Challenge finish with a nine-tries-to-five win against Gwalia Lightning at Ystrad Mynach.
David Gray is urging his Hibs team to "change history" when they travel to Celtic Park on Sunday for the Scottish Cup quarter-final. The current boss became one of the most important figures in the history of the club when he headed a late winner in the 2016 final to take the trophy back to Easter Road for the first time in 114 years.
The Wolfhounds retain their Celtic Challenge title after securing a thumping 102-0 win over Edinburgh in their final fixture of the competition.
There was a time when Saturday evenings for me meant a journey into the rich landscapes of Celtic music, guided by the charmingly Scottish-accented... Karen Martin is senior editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette’s weekly Perspective (opinion) section,
Paul: Every time there's a Celtic player that has a strong run of form, there's almost an expectation that they'll leave: be sold to make the club some money. Most shareholders hold success above financial return. It's such a small pond mentality, Celtic will never rise to properly compete in Europe unless this changes.