Scottish Gossip: Callum O'Hare, Andy Robertson, Lewis Ferguson, Billy Gilmour, Rangers, Celtic, Aberdeen
- Published
Both Celtic and Rangers are monitoring Coventry City winger Callum O'Hare, while up to three La Liga clubs watched him against West Bromwich Albion on Friday, as the 25-year-old returns to form after a period out through injury but is out of contract this summer. (Daily Mail), external
Liverpool are very confident 29-year-old Scotland captain Andy Robertson will stay at the club beyond this summer despite interest from Bayern Munich. (Football Insider), external
Former Rangers midfielder Barry Ferguson says nephew Lewis, who he reckons is now worth upwards of £20m and reportedly attracting interest from Juventus, would "have walked" to sign at Ibrox but there was no interest from the Glasgow club. (Go Radio via Football Scotland), external
Rangers boss Philippe Clement is urging fans not to leave Ibrox games early, saying "every second of help, helps" in the title race. (Daily Record), external
Brighton & Hove Albion midfielder Billy Gilmour says then Rangers caretaker manager Graeme Murty's decision not to select him for a Scottish Cup tie against Hamilton Academical in 2017, when he would have become their youngest-ever player, made it easier for him to leave the club for Chelsea. (Scottish FA via The National), external
"There's been too many games where Celtic have played in fits and starts and they now need to produce it for 90 minutes," says the club's ex-striker Chris Sutton. (Daily Record), external
"Aberdeen are a rudderless ship," says former Scotland striker Kris Boyd, who is critical of the role played by chairman Dave Cormack. (Scottish Sun), external
Former Pittodrie hero Joe Harper is worried Aberdeen are heading for a relegation battle and says fans were right to sing 'you're not fit to wear the shirt' during Wednesday's home loss to St Johnstone. (Press & Journal, external, subscription required)
The rise in incidences of crowd disorder at Scottish football matches this season has been attributed to reduced policing levels inside stadiums and clubs are warned that stewards are not enough to deter potential troublemakers from causing unrest. (Herald, external, subscription required)