Old Firm
The Old Firm refers to the historic and intense rivalry between Celtic Football Club and Rangers Football Club, the two most successful professional football clubs in Scotland, both based in Glasgow.[1] The term, originating in the early 20th century, underscores their commercial dominance and mutual antagonism, with matches between them—known as the Old Firm derby—serving as focal points for deep-seated cultural, religious, and political divisions rooted in 19th-century Irish Catholic immigration to Protestant-majority Scotland.[2][3] Celtic, founded in 1887 by Irish immigrant Brother Walfrid to support the poor Catholic community, and Rangers, established in 1872 with ties to the Scottish Protestant establishment, have collectively won all but four Scottish league titles since 1890, exemplifying their stranglehold on domestic football.[4] This duopoly has fueled extraordinary on-pitch success, including Celtic's 1967 European Cup victory and Rangers' 1972 Cup Winners' Cup triumph, alongside over 100 league championships between them, but has also perpetuated a zero-sum competition that marginalizes other Scottish clubs.[5][6] The rivalry's defining characteristics include fervent fan passion, marked by colorful traditions like Celtic's green-and-white hoops symbolizing Irish heritage and Rangers' royal blue evoking British loyalty, yet overshadowed by controversies such as sectarian chanting, hooliganism, and periodic violence that have drawn international scrutiny and led to match bans and stadium restrictions.[7][8] Despite efforts by club officials and authorities to mitigate bigotry—evident in policies against discriminatory behavior—the underlying tribalism persists, reflecting broader societal fault lines in Scottish identity rather than mere sporting contest.[9][4]Origins and Terminology
Etymology of "Old Firm"
The term "Old Firm" originated in a satirical cartoon published in the Scottish sporting periodical The Scottish Referee in April 1904, ahead of the Scottish Cup Final between Celtic F.C. and Rangers F.C..[10][11] The illustration depicted a disheveled man carrying a sandwich board inscribed with "Patronise the Old Firm", portraying the two clubs as a collusive commercial entity dominating Scottish football's revenues and prestige.[12][13] This caricature underscored the early 20th-century reality that Celtic and Rangers, as Glasgow's leading professional sides, monopolized league titles, cup competitions, and gate receipts, often to the detriment of smaller clubs.[14] The phrase's adoption reflected a perception of the clubs' symbiotic business interests rather than mere sporting antagonism, with "old" evoking established longevity—Rangers founded in 1872 and Celtic in 1887—and "firm" connoting a solid partnership akin to a corporate alliance.[15] While some anecdotal accounts suggest earlier verbal usage during the clubs' inaugural 1888 match, describing them as "old, firm friends", no contemporaneous documentation supports this, and the 1904 cartoon represents the earliest verified printed reference.[13] The term gained widespread currency thereafter, appearing in match reports and commentary by the 1910s, despite initial ironic intent.[16] Over time, "Old Firm" evolved from critique of commercial hegemony to a neutral descriptor for the derby itself, though some fans and commentators have resisted it for implying undue coziness amid the rivalry's intensity.[17] Its persistence highlights the enduring economic centrality of Celtic-Rangers fixtures, which by the interwar period accounted for disproportionate shares of Scottish football's attendance and media attention.[10]Founding and Early Context of the Clubs
Rangers Football Club was founded in March 1872 by four teenage boys—Peter McNeil, his brother Moses McNeil, Peter Campbell, and William McBeath—while walking through West End Park (now Kelvingrove Park) in Glasgow's west end, after witnessing a football match that inspired them to form their own team.[18][19] The club initially lacked a permanent home ground and focused on friendly matches against local sides, with its first recorded competitive fixture occurring in 1873 against Callander FC, resulting in a 2–0 victory.[18] By the late 1870s, Rangers had adopted royal blue as their kit color and begun participating in organized tournaments, reflecting the rapid growth of association football in Scotland's industrial cities amid expanding working-class leisure opportunities.[18] Celtic Football Club originated from an 1887 initiative led by Brother Walfrid, an Irish Marist Brother based at St. Mary's Church in Glasgow's East End, to generate funds for feeding impoverished parishioners, many of whom were Irish Catholic immigrants drawn to the city's shipbuilding and heavy industries following the Great Famine.[20][21] The club was formally constituted on 6 November 1887 at a parish meeting, building on the existing St. Mary's Boys' football team, and adopted green-and-white hoops as its colors to evoke Irish heritage.[20] Celtic's inaugural match took place on 28 May 1888 against Rangers at the latter's then-home ground, securing a 5–2 win that marked an early encounter between the clubs.[21] In their formative years, both clubs operated within Glasgow's densely populated urban landscape, where football served as an accessible outlet for the laboring classes in a city transformed by 19th-century industrialization and migration; Rangers drew from the west end's native Scottish communities, while Celtic's base in the east end aligned with waves of Irish settlement, though explicit sectarian divisions emerged later.[18][21] By the 1890s, Rangers had secured their first major trophy in the Scottish Cup (1894), and Celtic followed with league success in 1893, establishing them as dominant forces in Scottish football before the term "Old Firm" described their commercial and competitive interdependence.[18][20]Roots of the Rivalry
Sectarian and Religious Dimensions
The sectarian and religious dimensions of the Old Firm rivalry trace their origins to Glasgow's historical immigration patterns and the clubs' evolving identities amid Scotland's post-Reformation religious landscape. Celtic Football Club was founded on November 28, 1887, by Brother Walfrid, an Irish Marist Brother, explicitly to support the welfare of the city's impoverished Irish Catholic immigrant community, which had swelled due to the Great Famine in Ireland (1845–1852) and subsequent waves of migration seeking industrial work.[22] [23] This foundation tied Celtic intrinsically to Catholic Irish heritage, with early matches often framed as charitable efforts for Catholic causes.[22] In contrast, Rangers Football Club, established in 1872 by a group of teenage rowers with no stated religious intent, gradually aligned with Scotland's Protestant majority, particularly the Presbyterian and Unionist working class in Glasgow's west end, as the city polarized along ethno-religious lines in the late 19th century.[22] [23] Rangers maintained an unwritten policy against signing Catholic players until Maurice Johnston's transfer in 1989, reinforcing perceptions of it as a Protestant bastion.[22] Fan bases have historically mirrored these affiliations, amplifying divisions during matches. A 2008–2010 survey of Glasgow residents found 74% of Celtic supporters identified as Roman Catholic and only 4% as Protestant, while 65% of Rangers supporters identified as Protestant and 5% as Catholic.[24] Broader Scottish data from the 2014 Scottish Social Attitudes Survey indicated Celtic drew support from approximately 45% of Scottish Catholics, compared to 23% of Protestants for Rangers, with each club commanding about 13% of the national population as fans.[23] [25] These alignments manifest in matchday expressions, including Celtic fans displaying Irish republican symbols like the tricolor and singing songs referencing Irish nationalism, and Rangers supporters chanting "The Billy Boys"—a hymn to Protestant King William of Orange—or waving Union Jacks, evoking anti-Catholic sentiments tied to Ulster loyalism.[22] [26] Such displays have prompted UEFA fines against Rangers three times by 2011 for sectarian singing, including a 2011 ban on fans attending a European match after chants against PSV Eindhoven.[22] Violence linked to these religious undercurrents has periodically erupted around Old Firm fixtures, though empirical evidence shows low overall victimization rates. Strathclyde Police recorded 797 arrests for sectarian-related behavior between 2008 and 2009, predominantly tied to matchdays, with Rangers issuing 548 lifetime bans to fans over seven seasons and Celtic six over five for offensive conduct.[22] Notable incidents include the 2010–2011 parcel bomb attacks targeting Celtic manager Neil Lennon, a Catholic from County Armagh, Northern Ireland, who received death threats severe enough to force his family into protective custody after a March 2011 on-pitch clash with Rangers' Ally McCoist; the perpetrator was convicted in 2012.[26] [23] The 2003 Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act introduced aggravated penalties for religiously motivated crimes, followed by the 2012 Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications Act specifically targeting sectarian chanting, yet prosecutions persisted, with 53 charges under the latter by 2015.[22] Despite perceptions—88% of Scots in 2015 viewed sectarianism as a societal issue, with 55% attributing it partly to football—the actual incidence remains confined and declining. Only 0.7% of Glasgow respondents reported physical attacks motivated by religion in the prior five years, and 1% due to team support, with 48% agreeing sectarianism is "almost entirely confined to football."[24] [23] Efforts by clubs, including Rangers' post-1989 policy shift and joint anti-sectarian campaigns, have reduced overt discrimination, but the rivalry continues to serve as a cultural flashpoint for residual ethno-religious tensions imported from Ireland's partitions and Scotland's industrial-era divides.[22] [27]Political and National Identity Aspects
The Old Firm rivalry between Celtic and Rangers reflects longstanding tensions in national identity and politics within Scotland's Irish diaspora and broader British context, with Celtic embodying aspirations of Irish heritage and autonomy, while Rangers aligns with British unionism and loyalty to the United Kingdom. Celtic Football Club, founded in 1887 by Irish Marist Brother Walfrid to aid impoverished Irish immigrants in Glasgow, has served as a cultural anchor for the Irish Catholic community, fostering expressions of Irish ethnicity through symbols like the tricolour flag and rebel songs during matches.[28] This association positions Celtic supporters as custodians of Irish national identity in Scotland, often prioritizing ancestral ties to Ireland over assimilation into a singular Scottish narrative, as evidenced by players like Aiden McGeady opting to represent Ireland internationally despite Scottish birth.[29] In contrast, Rangers Football Club, established in 1872, has historically represented a Protestant, unionist identity rooted in fidelity to the British state, with fans displaying Union Jack flags and drawing parallels to Ulster loyalism amid Northern Ireland's conflicts.[30] Until 1989, Rangers maintained an unwritten policy against signing Catholic players, preserving a perceived ethnic and political homogeneity that reinforced its role as a bulwark against Irish separatism.[31] This unionist orientation manifests politically in opposition to Scottish independence, with Rangers supporters disproportionately favoring retention of the UK union, viewing Celtic's Irish symbolism as antithetical to British cohesion.[32] These identities fuel match-day expressions of political divergence, such as Celtic fans' occasional displays of Irish republican imagery and Rangers' loyalist anthems like "The Billy Boys," which evoke resistance to Irish nationalism during the early 20th-century Irish struggle.[33] While both clubs officially repudiate extremism—Celtic denouncing links to Irish nationalism militants and Rangers condemning paramilitary glorification—the rivalry mirrors broader causal divides, including the Troubles' nationalist-unionist clashes, where Celtic's Irish alignment and Rangers' British loyalty amplified transatlantic and intra-UK fault lines.[34] Empirical surveys indicate persistent correlations, with 89% of Scots attributing sectarian-political tensions partly to Old Firm dynamics, underscoring how these identities sustain cultural polarization despite efforts at moderation.[35]Socioeconomic and Class Influences
Both Celtic and Rangers originated as clubs appealing to Glasgow's industrial working class during the late 19th century, when the city's shipbuilding, engineering, and heavy industries employed a predominantly proletarian population amid rapid urbanization and economic volatility. Celtic was founded on November 6, 1887, by Marist Brother Walfrid explicitly to fund relief efforts for impoverished Irish Catholic immigrants in the East End, where overcrowding, food shortages, substandard housing, and fierce competition for low-skilled jobs created dire conditions for this migrant community.[21] Rangers, established in 1872 by a group of teenage friends from the working-class West End area of Hillhead, drew early backing from Protestant laborers in districts like Govan, home to major shipyards such as those of Harland & Wolff, where employment opportunities reinforced community ties.[36] Socioeconomic disparities between the Catholic and Protestant communities amplified the rivalry's undercurrents, as Catholics—predominantly Celtic supporters—faced systemic barriers including employment discrimination, resulting in persistently lower economic activity rates (78% for Catholics versus 84% for Church of Scotland affiliates in historical comparisons) and higher deprivation levels compared to Protestants.[37] [38] These gaps stemmed from factors like limited access to skilled trades, poorer educational outcomes, and housing segregation, fostering resentment over resource allocation in a city where industrial booms alternated with recessions, such as the 1920s downturn that heightened anti-Irish sentiment.[39] While both fanbases shared proletarian roots, Rangers supporters often benefited from relatively better integration into unionist-leaning trades, contrasting with the marginalization of Celtic's immigrant-aligned base and infusing matches with proxy battles over class mobility and economic survival. The clubs themselves capitalized on this dynamic, with Old Firm derbies generating substantial gate receipts that sustained operations and community prestige in an era when football offered rare escapism and symbolic status for underemployed workers.[40] Post-World War II deindustrialization further entrenched working-class loyalty, as shipyard closures and factory declines hit Glasgow hard, yet the rivalry persisted as a cultural anchor rather than a direct class conflict, given the overlapping socioeconomic profiles of supporters. By the late 20th century, surveys indicated Catholics remained at greater socioeconomic disadvantage relative to Protestants, though both groups exhibited similar unemployment risks when controlling for other variables.[41] Today, while fan demographics have diversified with middle-class influxes, the historical class imprint endures in the enduring appeal to Scotland's post-industrial heartlands.Historical Development of Matches
Pre-World War II Period
The first meeting between Celtic and Rangers took place on 28 May 1888 in a friendly match at the original Celtic Park, resulting in a 5–2 victory for Celtic.[42] The clubs' inaugural competitive encounter followed soon after, with Rangers prevailing 9–1 on 11 August 1888 in a Scottish League match.[43] As both teams ascended in Scottish football—Rangers joining the Scottish Football Alliance in 1889 and Celtic the Scottish Football League in 1890—their fixtures became regular occurrences, initially in league, cup, and local competitions like the Glasgow Cup. Early results were competitive, with high-scoring games common; for instance, Celtic defeated Rangers 6–1 in the 1889 Glasgow Cup.[44] From 1888 to 1939, Celtic and Rangers contested 94 matches across major competitions, yielding 37 wins for Rangers, 35 for Celtic, and 22 draws, underscoring the evenly matched nature of the derby during this era.[44] Pivotal encounters included Rangers' 3–1 triumph over Celtic in the 1894 Scottish Cup Final and Celtic's 2–0 reversal in the 1899 final, both played on neutral grounds and often title-deciding.[44] Rangers dominated league meetings in the 1890s and early 1900s, aligning with their multiple championships, while Celtic asserted strength in cup ties, winning the Scottish Cup in 1892 and 1899. These clashes frequently influenced the broader Scottish season, as the clubs' successes—Rangers claiming seven league titles by 1913 and Celtic four Scottish Cups—heightened stakes.[44] By the interwar years, Old Firm matches had evolved into marquee events, drawing unprecedented crowds that reflected their commercial and cultural dominance in Scottish football. A record pre-war attendance of 118,127 was recorded at Ibrox on 2 January 1939 for Rangers' 2–1 league win over Celtic.[45] While fan disturbances and pitch invasions occurred sporadically—such as crowd unrest in early cup finals—systematic violence remained less prevalent than post-war, with tensions primarily manifesting in partisan fervor rather than widespread riots.[46] The derby's intensity nonetheless grew alongside urbanization and immigration patterns in Glasgow, solidifying its status as the premier fixture before hostilities interrupted play in 1939.[44]Post-War to Pre-2012 Era
Following the resumption of competitive football after World War II, Old Firm matches quickly regained their pre-war intensity, with the Scottish Football League restarting in August 1946. Rangers asserted early dominance, securing seven league titles between 1947 and 1957, often at Celtic's expense in key derbies; for instance, in the 1950s, Rangers won 12 of 18 league encounters against Celtic.[47] Attendances swelled to capacity, reflecting the clubs' grip on Scottish football fandom, with crowds exceeding 80,000 routinely at Ibrox and Celtic Park, such as the 88,000 who watched a 1969 League Cup semi-final at Hampden Park.[48] This era underscored the rivalry's role in sustaining high-stakes domestic competition amid limited European exposure for Scottish clubs. Celtic's appointment of Jock Stein in 1965 catalyzed a reversal, leading to nine consecutive league titles from 1966 to 1974 and a transformative 1967 European Cup victory by the all-Scottish "Lisbon Lions" squad, which elevated Celtic's global standing and intensified psychological stakes in Old Firm clashes.[49] The tragedy of January 2, 1971, marred this period when a crowd crush on Stairway 13 at Ibrox during a Rangers-Celtic New Year derby killed 66 fans and injured over 140, prompting safety inquiries but not immediately altering match fervor; the game itself ended 1-1 before evacuation chaos ensued.[50] Violence persisted, fueled by sectarian undercurrents, culminating in the May 10, 1980, Scottish Cup Final where Rangers defeated Celtic 1-0 amid post-match riots involving pitched battles between supporters, resulting in 31 arrests and legislative response: an Act of Parliament banning alcohol sales at Scottish sports grounds, effective from 1981.[51] Rangers' resurgence under Graeme Souness from 1986 yielded nine straight league titles through 1997, dominating derbies with tactical innovations and high-profile signings, though Celtic's 1998 title drought end under Wim Jansen restored balance.[52] The 1990s saw escalating hooliganism, including bottle-throwing and pitch invasions, but the 1994 Taylor Report mandated all-seater stadiums post-Hillsborough, reducing capacities and attendances—Old Firm games still drew 40,000-50,000 consistently—while shifting focus to family-oriented atmospheres amid growing commercialization. Into the 2000s, competition evened under Martin O'Neill's Celtic (four titles, 2000-2005) and Walter Smith's Rangers (four titles, 2003-2011), with memorable encounters like Celtic's 2003 UEFA Cup final run heightening derby tension; however, persistent fan disorder, including sectarian singing, drew UEFA fines and calls for reform.[53] By 2011, matches remained fiercely contested, averaging over four goals per game in league fixtures, encapsulating the rivalry's evolution from raw post-war passion to a blend of sporting professionalism and cultural flashpoint.[54]2012 Administration and Rangers' Reformation
Rangers Football Club plc entered administration on 14 February 2012, following a court ruling against the club in a dispute with HMRC over an unpaid tax bill of approximately £9 million related to employee benefit trusts. Administrators from Duff & Phelps were appointed, leading to a 10-point deduction in the Scottish Premier League (SPL), which effectively ended Rangers' title challenge that season as they trailed Celtic by 14 points. The club continued playing under administration, finishing the 2011–12 SPL season in third place, but financial scrutiny intensified amid revelations of debts exceeding £130 million, including significant HMRC claims.[55][56] A proposed company voluntary arrangement (CVA) to restructure debts was rejected by creditors on 14 June 2012, primarily due to HMRC's opposition, forcing liquidation of the original Rangers plc entity. On the same day, the club's assets, including Ibrox Stadium and player registrations, were sold to a new company, Sevco Scotland Ltd (later renamed The Rangers Football Club Ltd), backed by businessman Charles Green for around £5.5 million. This "newco" formation preserved operational continuity in name, colors, and facilities but marked a legal discontinuity, with the old company entering formal liquidation on 31 October 2012. Scottish football authorities treated the entity as a new applicant, refusing to transfer the original club's SPL share or league history.[57][58] The new Rangers were expelled from the SPL after a 10–2 vote by member clubs on 4 July 2012 rejected their membership application, citing fit-and-proper ownership concerns and financial risks. On 13 July 2012, Scottish Football League (SFL) clubs voted 25–5 to admit the new entity into the Third Division (fourth tier), bypassing promotion/relegation norms due to the unique circumstances. This relegated Rangers to the lowest professional level, suspending Old Firm fixtures for four seasons as no competitive matches occurred between the clubs from 2012 to 2016. The absence diminished Scottish football's global appeal and revenues, with SPL attendance and TV interest declining without the rivalry's draw, while Celtic secured four consecutive titles unchallenged by Rangers.[57][59][60] Under manager Ally McCoist, the reformed Rangers began the 2012–13 season in the Third Division, winning the league with 102 points from 36 matches and embarking on a rapid ascent through promotions in 2014 and 2015 to reach the Scottish Championship. The reformation preserved fan loyalty and institutional identity but sparked ongoing debate over historical continuity, with UEFA eventually granting title recognition for European purposes while domestic bodies upheld the newco status for league standings. Old Firm matches resumed in the 2016–17 Scottish League Cup, marking the rivalry's return after the club's restructuring.[61][62]Post-2012 Recovery and Recent Encounters
Following the liquidation of the original Rangers Football Club plc on October 31, 2012, a new entity, The Rangers Football Club Limited, was established and accepted into the Scottish football league system at the bottom tier, the Scottish Third Division, for the 2012–13 season.[58] Under manager Ally McCoist, the club secured promotion as champions in their debut season, winning 34 of 36 matches.[56] Successive promotions followed: to Scottish League One in 2013–14 under McCoist, Scottish Championship in 2014–15 under Kenny McDowall and Stuart McCall, and finally to the Scottish Premiership via the 2015–16 Championship title under McCall.[61] The resumption of competitive Old Firm fixtures in the top flight occurred on December 30, 2016, with Celtic defeating Rangers 2–1 at Celtic Park, marking the first such encounter since 2012.[63] Early derbies post-return were dominated by Celtic, who won nine consecutive matches between September 2017 and February 2020, including a 5–1 League Cup final victory in December 2019.[64] Rangers' fortunes improved under Steven Gerrard from 2018, culminating in an unbeaten 2020–21 Premiership title win, their first since 2011, with key derby results including a 2–0 home win in October 2020 and a 2–1 away victory in April 2021.[65] Celtic reasserted dominance from 2021–22 onward, securing nine straight league titles through 2024–25 while winning most derbies, such as a 3–0 home league win in September 2023 and a 2–1 Scottish Cup final triumph in May 2024.[64] In the 2024–25 season, encounters were more competitive: a 0–0 draw at Ibrox on August 31, 2024; Rangers' 3–0 home league victory on January 2, 2025; and a 1–1 draw at Ibrox on May 4, 2025.[66][67][68] Rangers have won just four of the 28 top-flight derbies since their 2016 return, with Celtic claiming 17 victories and seven draws as of May 2025.[64]Competitive Records
All-Time Head-to-Head Results
As of March 2025, Celtic and Rangers had contested 445 competitive matches, with Celtic recording 170 victories, including 118 in the Scottish league, 27 in the Scottish Cup, and 25 in the Scottish League Cup.[69] The subsequent Old Firm encounter on August 31, 2025, ended in a 0-0 draw in the Scottish Premiership, bringing the total to 446 matches without altering the win counts.[70] In league fixtures alone, spanning 330 encounters since 1891, Rangers hold a historical edge with 126 wins to Celtic's 114, alongside 90 draws.[71] This disparity reflects Rangers' dominance in the pre-1960s era, when they won approximately two-thirds of league derbies, contrasted by Celtic's resurgence post-1965, securing around 60% of league meetings thereafter. Overall competitive records remain exceptionally tight, with each club claiming roughly 38% of victories and draws accounting for about 24%, underscoring the rivalry's parity despite fluctuating periods of supremacy.[72]| Competition | Matches Played | Celtic Wins | Rangers Wins | Draws |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scottish Premiership/League | 330 | 114 | 126 | 90 |
| Scottish Cup | ~100 (approx.) | 27+ | Fewer | Varies |
| Scottish League Cup | ~70 (approx.) | 25+ | Comparable | Varies |
| Total Competitive | 446 (as of Oct 2025) | ~170 | ~171 | ~105 |
League Table Comparisons
In the all-time standings of the Scottish top-flight division since its establishment in 1890, Rangers hold a narrow lead over Celtic in accumulated points and win percentage, underscoring their long-term historical dominance. Rangers have secured 6,568 points from 4,058 matches, with 2,616 wins, 782 draws, and 660 losses, yielding a win percentage of 74.1%. Celtic trail with 6,442 points from 4,065 matches, comprising 2,530 wins, 798 draws, and 737 losses, for a win percentage of 72.0%.[75][75]| Club | Matches | Wins | Draws | Losses | Goals For | Goals Against | Points | Win % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rangers | 4,058 | 2,616 | 782 | 660 | 9,137 | 3,991 | 6,568 | 74.1 |
| Celtic | 4,065 | 2,530 | 798 | 737 | 8,953 | 4,112 | 6,442 | 72.0 |
Biggest Victories
Celtic recorded the largest margin of victory in Old Firm history with a 7–1 win over Rangers in the Scottish League Cup final on 19 October 1957 at Hampden Park.[82][83][84] This 6-goal differential stands as the widest in competitive matches between the clubs.[85] Rangers' biggest victories over Celtic were two 5–0 results in Scottish League fixtures during the late 19th century, both at Ibrox Park.[69] These remain the Gers' record margins in the derby, as no larger winning differential has occurred in subsequent encounters.[82] Other notable lopsided results include Celtic's multiple 5–0 triumphs, such as in the 1925 Scottish Cup semi-final and the 2017–18 Scottish Premiership on 29 April 2018.[86] Rangers have secured several 5–1 wins, including during the 1960–61 season.[87]| Club | Score | Date | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Celtic | 7–1 | 19 Oct 1957 | Scottish League Cup Final |
| Rangers | 5–0 | Late 1880s/1890s | Scottish League |
| Celtic | 5–0 | 21 Mar 1925 | Scottish Cup |
| Celtic | 5–0 | 29 Apr 2018 | Scottish Premiership |
Honours Achieved by Each Club
Celtic and Rangers have amassed the vast majority of major honours in Scottish football history, with each club securing 55 top-flight league championships, tying for the record.[88][89][90] Celtic holds the record for Scottish Cup triumphs with 42, while Rangers lead in Scottish League Cup victories with 28.[88][89] In European competition, Celtic won the European Cup in 1967, and Rangers claimed the Cup Winners' Cup in 1972.[88][89] These achievements underscore their sustained dominance, though totals fluctuate slightly with recent successes; as of late 2024, Celtic's major honours tally reached 119, edging Rangers' 118.[91]| Competition | Celtic | Rangers |
|---|---|---|
| Scottish League Titles | 55 | 55 |
| Scottish Cup | 42 | 34 |
| Scottish League Cup | 22 | 28 |
| European Cup/Champions League | 1 | 0 |
| Cup Winners' Cup | 0 | 1 |
Player and Managerial Crossovers
Players Who Represented Both Clubs
Due to the profound cultural, religious, and fan-driven antipathy between Celtic and Rangers, only a limited number of players—approximately 20 in total—have made competitive first-team appearances for both clubs since their founding in the late 19th century. The majority of these crossovers occurred before World War II, when professional football structures were less rigid and player mobility higher, with at least 15 documented cases prior to 1939, including figures like Alec Bennett, who featured for Celtic from 1903 to 1908 before joining Rangers for a decade until 1918, and Tully Craig, who played eight matches for Celtic in 1919–1922 prior to 234 appearances and 11 league titles with Rangers from 1923 to 1935.[93][94] Post-World War II, such transfers became exceedingly rare, with just five players achieving first-team representation for both sides, often amid intense public and supporter hostility that underscored the rivalry's depth. Alfie Conn Jr. was the first, departing Rangers—where he had made 93 appearances and scored 23 goals from 1968 to 1974, contributing to the 1972 European Cup Winners' Cup triumph—for Celtic in 1977, where he added 32 appearances through 1979 and secured a Scottish League title and Scottish Cup.[95][94] Maurice Johnston's 1989 move from Nantes to Rangers, following 99 appearances and 52 goals for Celtic between 1984 and 1987, provoked unprecedented outrage among fans of both clubs, partly due to his Catholic background in a traditionally Protestant-leaning institution at Rangers; he scored 31 goals in 76 games for Rangers through 1991, winning league titles with each side. Steven Pressley followed a similar path, with 34 appearances for Rangers from 1990 to 1994 before 19 outings at Celtic in 2006–2008, claiming league championships at both.[95][94][93] Goalkeeper Mark Brown recorded four appearances for Rangers in 1999–2001 before serving as backup at Celtic from 2007 to 2010, where he made 13 appearances and won two league titles plus a Scottish Cup. Kenny Miller stands out as the only post-war player to represent both clubs twice, beginning with Rangers in 2000–2001 (14 matches, 10 goals), loaning to Celtic in 2006–2007 (46 appearances, 11 goals), and returning to Rangers for extended spells totaling 299 appearances from 2008 to 2018, securing multiple honors including league titles.[93][94][95]| Player | Rangers Period (Apps/Goals) | Celtic Period (Apps/Goals) | Notable Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alfie Conn Jr. | 1968–1974 (93/23) | 1977–1979 (32/NA) | European Cup Winners' Cup (1972, Rangers); Scottish titles with both |
| Mo Johnston | 1989–1991 (76/31) | 1984–1987 (99/52) | League titles with both; controversial signing |
| Steven Pressley | 1990–1994 (34/NA) | 2006–2008 (19/NA) | League titles with both |
| Mark Brown | 1999–2001 (4/NA) | 2007–2010 (13/NA) | 2 league titles, 1 Scottish Cup (Celtic) |
| Kenny Miller | 2000–2001, 2008–2018 (299 total/NA) | 2006–2007 (46/11) | Multiple league titles (Rangers); only post-war double-crosser |
Managerial Records and Transitions
No manager has ever served as first-team manager for both Celtic and Rangers, a stark contrast to the handful of players who crossed the divide, underscoring the rivalry's entrenched sectarian and communal barriers that render such transitions professionally untenable.[96] This absence highlights how managerial roles demand unwavering allegiance to one institution's identity, with appointments often prioritizing proven loyalty or external pedigree over internal mobility between the clubs. Jock Stein's appointment as Celtic manager in March 1965 marked a pivotal transition, elevating the club from domestic mediocrity to European dominance; his record against Rangers included 29 wins, 12 draws, and 17 losses across 58 matches, contributing to Celtic's 10 league titles during his tenure through 1978.[97] Similarly, Walter Smith's two spells at Rangers—from July 1991 to June 1998 and January 2007 to May 2011—restored and sustained supremacy, with 28 wins, 13 draws, and 15 losses in 56 Old Firm encounters, underpinning seven consecutive league wins in his first period alone.[98] More recent shifts illustrate ongoing flux: Martin O'Neill's arrival at Celtic in 2000 yielded 16 wins from 27 derbies (3 draws, 8 losses), fueling an unbeaten domestic treble in 2001 despite European near-misses.[99] Rangers' post-administration recovery under Steven Gerrard from May 2018 to July 2021 reversed Celtic's nine-year title streak, with Gerrard securing 8 wins, 1 draw, and 4 losses in 13 meetings, culminating in the 2020-21 Premiership victory.[64] Brendan Rodgers, returning to Celtic in June 2023, has maintained pressure with 12 wins from his initial 15 derbies across spells (2 draws, 1 loss), though Rangers' managerial turnover—evident in Philippe Clement's 1 win from 7 by late 2023—has hindered sustained challenge.[64][100]| Manager | Club | Old Firm Matches | Wins | Draws | Losses | Win % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jock Stein | Celtic | 58 | 29 | 12 | 17 | 50% |
| Walter Smith | Rangers | 56 | 28 | 13 | 15 | 50% |
| Martin O'Neill | Celtic | 27 | 16 | 3 | 8 | 59% |
| Steven Gerrard | Rangers | 13 | 8 | 1 | 4 | 62% |
Family Connections Across Clubs
The McAdam brothers, Tom and Colin, represent the sole documented instance of siblings playing against each other in an Old Firm derby, highlighting the rarity of direct family divisions across the Celtic-Rangers divide. Tom McAdam, a defender, joined Celtic from Dundee United in September 1977 for £60,000 and made over 200 appearances for the club between 1977 and 1983, including scoring against Rangers on multiple occasions.[102] His elder brother Colin, a forward, signed for Rangers in 1980 and played there until 1984, appearing in 54 league matches and contributing to their campaigns during that period.[103] The brothers' on-pitch encounters peaked in a Scottish Premier Division match on November 22, 1980, when Rangers defeated Celtic 3-0 at Ibrox Stadium; Colin scored twice while directly opposed by Tom, who was assigned to man-mark him.[103] In their first derby clash earlier that year, Tom similarly shadowed Colin, underscoring the personal tension amid the fixture's sectarian undertones, though both maintained familial bonds off the field.[104] Both had begun their careers at Dumbarton, where they learned from seasoned players, before diverging to Glasgow's polar opposite clubs—a path Tom pursued despite being a childhood Rangers supporter.[105] No other verified cases of brothers, fathers-sons, or immediate relatives actively playing for opposing Old Firm teams have emerged in the rivalry's history, reflecting the deep-seated loyalties that typically align family allegiances with one club. Colin's death in 2013 prompted Tom to express profound grief, emphasizing their enduring brotherhood beyond club colors.[105] This episode stands as an outlier, with broader Scottish football families—like the McGinns or Shaws—confined to single-club lineages or non-Old Firm contexts, reinforcing the rivalry's role in segmenting personal and familial ties.[104]Individual and Aggregate Statistics
Appearance and Goal Records
The record for most appearances in Old Firm derby matches is held by Rangers player Alec Smith, who featured in 87 games between 1894 and 1913.[106][107] For Celtic, midfielder Paul McStay holds the club record with 70 appearances, spanning from his debut on 13 May 1982 until 1997.[108]| Club | Player | Appearances | Years Active |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rangers | Alec Smith | 87 | 1894–1913 |
| Celtic | Paul McStay | 70 | 1982–1997 |
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ally McCoist | Rangers | 27 |
| 2 | Sandy McMahon | Celtic | 22 |
| 3 | Jimmy McGrory | Celtic | 19 |
Attendance Trends
The Old Firm derbies have long commanded exceptionally high attendances, reflecting the intense rivalry's draw on Scottish football supporters. The highest recorded crowd for such a match was 132,870 at Hampden Park for the 1969 Scottish Cup semi-final replay between Rangers and Celtic.[113] Prior peaks include 118,567 at Ibrox Stadium on January 2, 1939, when Rangers defeated Celtic 2-1, and 92,000 at Celtic Park on January 1, 1938.[114] These figures, from an era of terraced standing, exceeded modern capacities and underscored the matches' cultural significance before World War II disruptions and post-war shifts in viewing habits. Following the 1994 Taylor Report mandating all-seater stadiums, capacities were reduced to mitigate safety risks, capping Celtic Park at 60,411 and Ibrox at 50,987.[115] Derby attendances stabilized near these limits, with fixtures routinely selling out; for instance, Celtic's home league games in the 2023-24 season averaged 58,974, including Old Firm clashes.[116] Rangers reported similar near-capacity turnouts, averaging 49,889 across home matches in recent seasons.[117] The COVID-19 pandemic halted live attendances from March 2020 to summer 2021, but post-restriction figures rebounded swiftly, maintaining averages above 58,000 for Celtic and 48,000 for Rangers in 2024-25.[118]| Era | Key Characteristics | Example Attendances |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-1994 (Terraced) | Peaks over 100,000 possible at home grounds or neutrals | 118,567 (Ibrox, 1939); 132,870 (Hampden, 1969)[114][48] |
| Post-1994 (All-Seater) | Constrained by safety-limited capacities; consistent sell-outs | ~59,000 (Celtic home, 2023-24); ~50,000 (Rangers home, recent)[116][117] |
Dominance in Scottish Football
League Championship Control
The Old Firm rivalry between Celtic and Rangers has characterized Scottish league championship outcomes since the competition's establishment in 1890, with the two clubs securing 110 of the 120 top-division titles awarded through the 2024–25 season, equalling 55 each.[81][120] This monopoly reflects superior resources, fan bases, and competitive edge, limiting other clubs' opportunities despite occasional challenges.[121] The remaining 10 titles were distributed among clubs including Dumbarton (1897–98, 1898–99), Third Lanark (1903–04), Hibernian (1947–48, 1951–52), Dundee (1961–62), Kilmarnock (1964–65), and Aberdeen (1979–80, 1984–85).[122] Early dominance alternated between the clubs, with Rangers claiming the inaugural shared title in 1890–91 alongside Dumbarton, followed by Celtic's run of six consecutive championships from 1904–05 to 1909–10.[72] Rangers then asserted control in the interwar period, winning nine of 11 titles from 1927–28 to 1938–39, bolstered by consistent squad depth and tactical innovations under managers like Bill Struth.[65] Post-World War II, Celtic responded with nine straight titles from 1965–66 to 1973–74 under Jock Stein, leveraging high-pressing play and European success to elevate domestic standards.[6] Rangers matched this feat with their own nine-in-a-row sequence from 1988–89 to 1996–97, during which they invested heavily in scouting and infrastructure, amassing points totals that underscored financial disparities with rivals.[123] Celtic reasserted supremacy in the modern era, achieving nine consecutive titles from 2011–12 to 2019–20 after Rangers' 2012 liquidation and climb through lower divisions, a period marked by Brendan Rodgers' recruitment of international talent and data-driven analytics.[121] Rangers interrupted this in 2020–21 under Steven Gerrard, winning by 20 points, but Celtic reclaimed the title in 2021–22 and 2023–24, with Rangers securing 2022–23 amid tighter contests averaging under five points' margin in recent deciders.[120] This pattern of alternating streaks highlights how head-to-head results and squad investments dictate control, with no other club mounting a sustained threat since Aberdeen's 1984–85 victory.[81]| Club | Total Titles | Notable Consecutive Sequences |
|---|---|---|
| Celtic | 55 | 1904–10 (6), 1965–74 (9), 2011–20 (9) |
| Rangers | 55 | 1927–39 (9 of 11), 1988–97 (9) |