Celtic To Step Up A Gear At St James' Park
Last updated : 20 July 2007 By Footy Mad - Editor
Celtic provided the opposition for testimonials for both Alan Shearer and Peter Beardsley, and they proved to be two evenings the Geordies will never unforget.
Celtic have been on the road for sometime and will obviously be more match fit than Newcastle's players, but are they starting to feel a bit of "burn out"?
Gordon Strachan declared the summer officially over after his Celtic side were beaten 2-0 by the Major League Soccer All-Stars in Denver, Colorado.
Celtic had looked sluggish from the kick-off as they continued their pre-season preparations in this MLS showpiece fixture at Dick's Sporting Goods Park and they were made to pay as Colombian striker Juan Pablo Angel and his compatriot Juan Toja hit goals to settle the match in the first half.
Strachan: "That was a great workout and I think the summer is officially over. I enjoyed it, especially the second half when we got things organised. The MLS can proud of themselves. They played well.
"They started brighter. There was an energy to them, an energy that comes I would think with being at home and playing quite a few games and being right on top of their game.
"Everybody's sharp, mentally sharp and competing in every game. We're not at that stage yet, we're still preparing, so the edge they had mentally helped and the energy they've built up over the season helped.
"It took them a long time to warm up so preparation, we need to think about that. We didn't do anything this morning so maybe we could have been a bit sharper.
"But there you go, you take your choice in taking training and saying what's best for the players and maybe it wasn't right. But you can't take anything away from the MLS. I thought they were excellent.
"We gave them a better game in the second half because we got ourselves organised and they listened to the coach at half-time. The players got better.
"I liked their attitude that it was 2-0 and they weren't going to give up. Some clubs might say that's it and start keeping the ball and try to leave it at 2-0. This team tried to go and win the game. They tried to get those goals back. We left ourselves open at times but that's the way we are.
"So there were good things for us."
Thursday 11th May 2006
ALAN SHEARER TESTIMONIAL: NEWCASTLE UTD 3 CELTIC 2
The Geordie public gathered at St James' Park to say goodbye to the man who will always remain a legend on Tyneside. How often have we heard this week "he won nothing", but when he says "I lived the dream and I couldn't care less about medals" you know it comes from the heart.
Others, like Gazza and Peter Beardsley, told of their pride of wearing the Toon shirt. I'm sure they did. But they didn't know how quick to get away from the club in search of stardom - Shearer turned down the biggest clubs in the world to come to Newcastle. THAT'S the difference - and THAT is what we should always remember.
The 35-year-old striker, whose playing days were ended three weeks prematurely by a knee injury, started and finished his testimonial game against Celtic - scoring the winner from the penalty spot after returning to the pitch as a substitute in injury time.
For the record, £9.5million signing Albert Luque volleyed the Magpies in front on 70 minutes - but a Shaun Maloney penalty and a John Hartson header put Celtic ahead before Paul Lawson's own goal and Shearer's spot-kick won it.
Newcastle old boys Steve Watson and Gary Speed each played part of a first half in which the home side - with all the players wearing number nine on their shorts - enjoyed the better of the chances.
Caretaker boss Glenn Roeder made six changes at the break, one of them handing Steven Taylor his first football since Boxing Day. The noise was not quelled by the arrival of Rob Lee as a 67th-minute substitute, and it grew further when Luque volleyed home Peter Ramage's 70th-minute cross to open the scoring.
Les Ferdinand - the man Shearer regards as his best partner at the club - entered the fray seconds later. But Celtic were level on 79 minutes when Maloney was tripped by Ramage, and the midfielder converted the resulting penalty.
Hartson looked to have won the game for the visitors with a trademark header eight minutes from time. But after Lawson had deflected Ferdinand's cross into his own net, the ending the script demanded duly arrived. Referee Mark Clattenburg awarded a 'diplomatic' penalty after Ferdinand went down in the box in injury-time, and Shearer returned to the pitch to score from the spot - just as he had done in his final competitive game at Sunderland.