Football Mar 26, 2026

Scottish Premiership title race: Why playing first matters for Hearts, Rangers and Celtic in battle for top-spot

👤
By Admin
Sports Journalist
Scottish Premiership title race: Why playing first matters for Hearts, Rangers and Celtic in battle for top-spot

Another weekend, another twist in the title race.

After Hearts and Rangers took care of business on Saturday, champions Celtic fell to defeat away to Dundee United on Sunday.

Perhaps not predictable, but certainly probable.

The Scottish Premiership's current top three have only all won on the same weekend once this season - on the weekend of January 10/11.

Coincidentally, they faced the same three teams they met just last weekend - Dundee, Aberdeen and Dundee United.

There's a decent chance that trend could continue too. Due to post-split head-to-heads, at least one of the top three are guaranteed to drop points in three of the remaining seven gameweeks.

So strap in, the home straight is set to be a bumpy ride.

One of the most obvious pre-match questions asked of a manager involved in a title race concerns the idea of 'putting pressure' on rivals when playing before them. Or the inverse of that, is there added pressure to respond when playing afterwards?

Usually, they are briefed to tell you that they only focus on their own game, and they can't control what happens elsewhere.

But that's only partly true.

Believe me, players do check scores, watch games, and read league tables.

You'd be correct to say they can't control what happens in other matches, though they can still influence them.

As evidenced by a consistent pattern of faltering follow-up acts, the team who plays first usually has an advantage:

I could go on and on. The last time there were no weekend slip-ups from the sides playing later was on the weekend of January 10/11 - the only one in which all three teams won.

This is psychology, not coincidence.

Whether it directly puts more pressure on the players or not, anyone who has been inside one of the grounds of those teams playing catch-up can feel the palpable tension and angst from the stands.

The post-split fixtures are yet to be confirmed, so we cannot fully examine to what extent fixture sequencing may influence the title race. However, if this trend continues, all three teams could spill points before the split.

Rangers play first after the international break, hosting Dundee United at home on Saturday April 4.

Meaning, by the time leaders Hearts go to Livingston at 2pm on Sunday April 12 - live on Your Site - they could find themselves knocked off top spot for the first time since September.

Champions Celtic then visit Dundee at 4.30pm - also live on Your Site - and could be eight points behind by kick-off.

The following weekend, it will be Rangers' turn to respond as they visit Falkirk - live on Your Site on April 12 - after both Hearts and Celtic play at home the previous day.

Celtic are the furthest behind of the three at this stage but benefit from having the greatest depth of title-winning experience among their ranks.

James Forrest is the club's most-decorated player in its history, while Callum McGregor has captained the side to four consecutive Scottish Premierships. Having won 13 and 10 top-flight titles respectively, they should quite rightfully accept the 'serial winners' tag.

There are 62 Scottish top-flight league winners' medals in the Celtic dressing room, 73 if you include Martin O'Neill and his coaching staff.

Meanwhile, 43-year-old goalkeeper Craig Gordon is Hearts' sole title-winner - lifting the trophy five times with Celtic - and Rangers captain James Tavernier is the only player at Ibrox who boasts a medal.

Those numbers are hardly a surprise, the champions have come out on top in 13 out of the last 14 seasons, so their credentials are unquestionable.

But cantering to countless trophies is one thing, navigating a title race is another.

For all their experience, this Celtic team have never found themselves in this position before. The hunted have never been the hunters.

This is the first time they haven't been top at this stage since Rangers last won the title in 2021, and they haven't been outside the top two after 31 games since 1995.

In fact, it's been 17 years since the team that led at this point last relinquished the championship when Gordon Strachan's Celtic gave up a three-point advantage on Walter Smith's Rangers in 2009.

That being said, this team has seen off moderate challenges to the Premiership throne from their Old Firm rivals in 2023/24 under Philippe Clement and Giovanni van Bronckhorst in 2021/22, so it's unfair to say they've never experienced a 'title race' as such.

But coming from behind is a new challenge for Scotland's perennial winners, and for their legendary veteran manager, whose three title triumphs in the early 2000s were all by significant margins of at least 15 points.

In the two seasons O'Neill failed to win the league during his first spell, Rangers won it on the final day of the season.

As the most exciting title race in decades nears its conclusion, can Celtic's 'mentality monsters' still prevail when backed into a corner?

Tags:

football news

Share this article

Related Posts

Championship talking points: Race for second and play-offs hots up as Coventry take a step closer to the Premier League

Championship talking points: Race for second and play-offs hots up as Coventry take a step closer to the Premier League

With Middlesbrough, Ipswich and Millwall all in action at Saturday lunchtime, all eyes were on the Championship and the battle to finish as runners-...

Arsenal need to find answers after poor performance in Carabao Cup final loss to Man City raises questions

Arsenal need to find answers after poor performance in Carabao Cup final loss to Man City raises questions

The expressions on the faces of the Arsenal players as they trudged up the Wembley stairs to collect their runners-up medals told the tale. An afterno...

Arsenal 0-2 Man City player ratings: Nico O'Reilly faultless as Mikel Arteta's side choke in Carabao Cup final at Wembley

Arsenal 0-2 Man City player ratings: Nico O'Reilly faultless as Mikel Arteta's side choke in Carabao Cup final at Wembley

Manchester City beat Arsenal to the League Cup with a near-perfect display at Wembley on Sunday. It was Pep Guardiola's 19th trophy as City boss and a...

Enzo Fernandez critical of Chelsea hierarchy over Enzo Maresca exit - Paper talk and football transfer gossip

Enzo Fernandez critical of Chelsea hierarchy over Enzo Maresca exit - Paper talk and football transfer gossip

The top stories and transfer rumours from Sunday's newspapers...PREMIER LEAGUEChelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez has criticised the club's hierarchy fo...

Tottenham's Premier League relegation fears deepen - shocking stats, surprise subs and 'seven finals' in focus

Tottenham's Premier League relegation fears deepen - shocking stats, surprise subs and 'seven finals' in focus

It was billed as the biggest game of their season - and Spurs were beaten 3-0. Their Premier League relegation fears are real.West Ham's defeat at Ast...

Newcastle 1-2 Sunderland: Eddie Howe takes blame for Tyne-Wear defeat as Alan Shearer labels performance 'pathetic and weak'

Newcastle 1-2 Sunderland: Eddie Howe takes blame for Tyne-Wear defeat as Alan Shearer labels performance 'pathetic and weak'

Eddie Howe said he was to blame after Newcastle lost the first Tyne-Wear derby in over 10 years at St James' Park.Brian Brobbey's 90th-minute winner c...