Remove ads
Football games From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2024 Scottish League Cup final was an association football match took place at Hampden Park, Glasgow on 15 December 2024. It was the culmination of the 2024–25 Scottish League Cup, the 79th season of the Scottish League Cup (known as the Premier Sports Cup for sponsorship reasons), a competition for the 42 teams in the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL). It was played between Old Firm rivals Celtic (21-time winners, including in seven of the previous ten editions) and Rangers (title holders and record 28-time winners).[2] It was the 17th Scottish League Cup final between the sides and the 443rd meeting overall in major competitions.
Event | 2024–25 Scottish League Cup | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
After extra time Celtic won 5–4 on penalties | |||||||
Date | 15 December 2024[1] | ||||||
Venue | Hampden Park, Glasgow | ||||||
Referee | John Beaton | ||||||
Attendance | 49,420 | ||||||
After the match finished in a 3–3 draw at the end of normal time and the same scoreline after extra time, Celtic won 5–4 in a penalty shootout to claim the trophy.[3][4]
As both clubs participated in European competitions, they both received a bye through the group stage.
Round | Opposition | Score |
---|---|---|
Second round | St Johnstone[6] | 2–0 (h)[a] |
Quarter-final | Dundee | 3–0 (h) |
Semi-final | Motherwell[7] | 2–1 (n) |
This was the second final between the clubs in the calendar year, after the 2024 Scottish Cup final in May which brought the previous domestic season to a close.
Celtic went into the final as favourites owing to their position of dominance in Scottish football over the preceding dozen years since the events of 2012 involving Rangers, and in recent seasons (they had won seven of the nine trophies on offer since 2021–22, with Rangers winning the other two). Celtic had also made a stronger start to the 2024–25 Scottish Premiership, including a 3–0 win over Rangers, and held an 11-point lead over their old rivals in the league table; Rangers also trailed Aberdeen, whom Celtic had defeated 6–0 in their League Cup semi-final meeting.[5] Both clubs had performed credibly in Europe, each recording draws in the days leading up to the final: Celtic returned from a goalless Champions League fixture away to Dinamo Zagreb,[8] and Rangers shared the points at home to Tottenham Hotspur in the Europa League, with defender John Souttar substituted due to an injury which caused him to miss the Hampden showpiece.[9]
In the hours prior to the match there were incidents of disorder in Glasgow city centre, as the clubs' 'ultras' groups confronted one another, smashed shop windows and threw missiles at police.[10][11]
Within the stadium, pyrotechnics were ignited at both ends on a large scale, a common occurrence in Scottish football in the 2020s, despite warnings from governing bodies over their misuse and both Celtic and Rangers (as well as Motherwell) facing fines for the same actions at Hampden in the competition's semi-finals. Kick-off was delayed slightly to allow smoke from the devices to clear.[12][13]
Rangers took the lead in the first half when Nedim Bajrami anticipated and intercepted a pass across midfield from Greg Taylor and fed Hamza Igamane, whose shot was saved by Kasper Schmeichel only for Bajrami to score from the rebound.[3][4]
Taylor redeemed his mistake early in the second half with the shot which brought the equaliser, although a deflection off Nicolas Raskin took the ball past Rangers goalkeeper Jack Butland. Three minutes later Celtic took the lead when Daizen Maeda beat defender Leon Balogun to a pass, raced forward and finished into the corner. The Rangers equaliser came from Mohamed Diomande who showed strength to turn inside the penalty area and score past Schmeichel.[3][4]
In the 87th minute, Celtic had what appeared to be a decisive goal when Nicolas Kühn dribbled upfield and had space to collect a return pass from Arne Engels after Diomande slipped while chasing back, placing the ball past Butland. However, Rangers hit back almost immediately, Václav Černý's cross met by a header from substitute Danilo to take the match to extra time.[3][4]
Few chances were created in the additional 30 minutes, although Rangers had a claim for a penalty when Liam Scales could be seen holding Černý's shirt just inside the area.[14][15][16][17]
The outcome was therefore settled in a penalty shootout, in which Rıdvan Yılmaz of Rangers had his kick saved by Schmeichel. All other efforts (including one from Butland) were scored, with the winning penalty converted by Maeda.[3][4]
Hundreds of celebrating Celtic supporters made their way onto the pitchside track in the minutes after the shootout, which delayed the trophy presentation and was reported could result in sanctions for the club.[12]
Celtic won the 119th major trophy in their history, moving them ahead of Rangers in the all-time rankings.[18] Their winger James Forrest claimed a 25th winner's medal with the club, equalling the record held by Bobby Lennox.[19] For Rangers the outcome was very similar to their defeat in the 2022 UEFA Europa League final, with captain James Tavernier commenting that it evoked 'flashbacks' of that disappointment.[20][21]
Rangers submitted an official request for clarification from the Scottish Football Association into the extra time penalty incident.[14] The Video Assistant Referee team had not intervened, with a reason initially provided that referee John Beaton had already blown his whistle to award a free kick for a trip by Scales on Černý outside the box, half a second before the jersey pull. However, analysts including current and former officials assessed that the foul was continuous and ended inside the area.[15][16] Four days after the match, the SFA's head of referee operations Willie Collum stated that it was a "really, really poor" and "unacceptable" decision not to review the incident and award Rangers a penalty.[17]
Celtic
|
Rangers
|
|
|
Assistant referees:
|
|
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.