List of Celtic F.C. records and statistics

Photo of trophy case within the Celtic Park trophy room, several of the trophies draped in green and white coloured ribbons
A trophy case in the Celtic Park trophy room

Celtic Football Club is a Scottish professional association football club based in Glasgow. They have played at their home ground, Celtic Park, since 1892. Celtic were founding members of the Scottish Football League in 1890, and the Scottish Premier League in 1998 as well as the Scottish Professional Football League in 2013.

The list encompasses the major honours won by Celtic, records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Celtic players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club. Attendance records at Celtic Park, and also at Hampden Park which has on occasion been used for home games, are also included.

Celtic have won 49 top-flight titles, and hold the record for most Scottish Cup wins with 38. The club's record appearance maker is Billy McNeill, who made 822 appearances between 1957 and 1975. Jimmy McGrory is the club's record goalscorer, scoring 522 goals during his Celtic career.

All figures are correct as of 20 September 2018.

Honours

Celtic's first ever silverware was won in 1889 when they defeated Cowlairs 6–1 in the final of the North-Eastern Cup.[1] A year later they won the Glasgow Cup, before winning their first major national hour in 1892 by defeating Queen's Park 5–1 in the final of the Scottish Cup.[1] Celtic won their first league title in 1892–93.[1] In 1906–07 Celtic became the first club to win the league and cup double in Scotland,[1] a feat they have now accomplished on 12 occasions. They won their first domestic treble in 1966–67, the same season they became the first British club to win the European Cup with their 2–1 victory over Inter Milan in the final.[1] Celtic's most recent success was their win in the 2018 Scottish Cup Final, completing their fifth domestic treble and becoming the first club to win all three major domestic trophies in Scotland in two consecutive seasons.[2]

In all, Celtic have won the Scottish League Championship 49 times, the Scottish Cup a record 38 times, the Scottish League Cup 17 times and the European Cup once.

Domestic

League[3][4]

Cups[3][4]

International

Others

1891, 1892, 1895, 1896, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1910, 1916, 1917, 1920, 1921, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1931, 1939, 1941, 1949, 1956, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1970, 1975 (shared)*, 1982
* 1975 trophy shared with Rangers after a 2–2 draw.
1892, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1899, 1903, 1905, 1908, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1920, 1921, 1924, 1926, 1936, 1937, 1943, 1950, 1953, 1959, 1961 (shared)*
* 1961 trophy shared with Clyde after a 1–1 draw.
1898–99
1898–1900

Reserve honours

  • Reserve League Championship: 14 (Known as Scottish Reserve League between 1895 and 1975 and then Reserve Scottish Premier League from 1975 onwards)[39][40][41]
1896, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1980, 1985, 1991, 1994, 1995
2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
  • Scottish Reserve Cup: 8[42]
1891, 1935, 1936, 1958, 1966, 1971, 1974, 1985
  • Reserve League Cup: 13[42]
1960, 1967, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1980, 1981, 1986, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996,
  • Scottish Alliance: 4[43]
1922, 1934, 1937, 1938
1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966

Youth honours

1984, 1987, 1989, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2017
1995, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016
2002, 2003, 2004
1990, 1991, 1997, 1998, 2008, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017

Other awards

1967[49]
1970[50]
2003 (awarded to the fans of Celtic FC)[51]
2003 (awarded to the fans of Celtic FC)[52]
November 2002, August 2003, August 2012
1979
  • Polar Bear Trophy: 1[54]
1975

Player records

Appearances

Most appearances

Competitive, professional matches only.

# Name Years League Scottish Cup League Cup Continental1 Other2 Total Ref
1Scotland Billy McNeill1957–1975486941387232822[66]
2Scotland Alec McNair1904–1925583570044684[67]
3Scotland Paul McStay1981–19975156654435683[68]
4Scotland Roy Aitken1976–199048455824813682[69]
5Scotland Danny McGrain1970–1987439601065422681[70]
6Republic of Ireland Patrick Bonner1978–19954835564404646[71]
7Scotland Bobby Lennox1961–1978
1979–1980
340511186822599[72]
8Scotland Bobby Evans1944–19603846487045580[73]
9Scotland Jimmy McMenemy1902–1920456590043558[74]
10Scotland Jimmy Johnstone1962–197530648926815529[75]

Goalscorers

Photograph of Jimmy McGrory in his playing days
Jimmy McGrory, Celtic's all-time top goalscorer and the record scorer in British football history

Top goalscorers

Competitive, professional matches only. Matches played appear in brackets.

# Name Years League Scottish Cup League Cup Continental1 Other2 Total Ref
1Scotland Jimmy McGrory1922–1937396 (378)74 (67)0 (0)0 (0)32 (32)5023(477)3[87]
2Scotland Bobby Lennox1961–1978
1979–1980
171 (340)31 (51)63 (118)13 (68)23 (22)301 (599)[72]
3Sweden Henrik Larsson1997–2004174 (221)23 (25)10 (11)35 (58)0 (0)242 (315)[88]
4Scotland Jimmy Quinn1900–1917188 (272)30 (58)0 (0)0 (0)21 (39)239 (369)[89]
5Scotland Stevie Chalmers1958–1971155 (263)29 (47)31 (60)13 (39)8 (22)236 (431)[88]
6Scotland Sandy McMahon1891–1903131 (177)48 (45)0 (0)0 (0)21 (39)200 (261)[90]
7Republic of Ireland Patsy Gallacher1911–1926186 (432)9 (32)0 (0)0 (0)5 (27)200 (491)[91]
8Scotland John Hughes1960–1971114 (255)25 (51)38 (69)10 (41)10 (19)197 (435)[92]
9Scotland Jimmy McMenemy1902–1920142 (456)24 (59)0 (0)0 (0)10 (43)178 (558)[74]
10Scotland Kenny Dalglish1968–1977111 (204)11 (30)35 (60)9 (28)7 (16)173 (338)[93]

1 Comprises appearances in the European Cup / Champions League, European Cup Winners Cup, UEFA Cup / Europa League, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup and the Intercontinental Cup.

2 Includes cup competitions: the Glasgow Cup, Drybrough Cup and the Anglo-Scottish Cup. Appearance and goal statistics are not readily available for the Glasgow Charity Cup.

3 In addition to these statistics, it is known that McGrory made a further 21 appearances in the Glasgow Charity Cup, scoring 20 goals. This makes McGrory's overall total of goals for Celtic in senior competitions 522 goals.[76]

International

World Cup

European Championship

Transfers

Record transfer fees paid

# Player From Fee Date Ref
1 France Odsonne Édouard France Paris Saint-Germain £9,000,000 15 June 2018 [96]
2 England Chris Sutton England Chelsea £6,000,000 11 July 2000 [97]
Wales John Hartson England Coventry City 2 August 2001 [98]
4 Israel Eyal Berkovic England West Ham £5,750,000 8 July 1999 [99]
Northern Ireland Neil Lennon England Leicester City 8 December 2000 [100]
6 Brazil Rafael Scheidt Brazil Grêmio £4,800,000 1 January 2000 [101]
7 France Olivier Ntcham England Manchester City £4,500,000 12 July 2017 [102]
8 Scotland Scott Brown Scotland Hibernian £4,400,000 1 June 2007 [103]
9 Belgium Joos Valgaeren Netherlands Roda JC £3,800,000 28 July 2000 [104]
France Marc-Antoine Fortune France AS Nancy 9 July 2009 [105]

Record transfer fees received

# Player To Fee Date Ref
1 France Moussa Dembélé France Lyon £19,700,000 31 August 2018 [106]
2 Kenya Victor Wanyama England Southampton £12,500,000 11 July 2013 [107]
3 Netherlands Virgil van Dijk England Southampton £11,500,000 1 September 2015 [108]
4 England Fraser Forster England Southampton £10,000,000 8 August 2014 [109]
5 Republic of Ireland Aiden McGeady Russia Spartak Moscow £9,500,000 12 August 2010 [110]
6 Scotland Stuart Armstrong England Southampton £7,000,000 26 June 2018 [111]
7 Bulgaria Stilian Petrov England Aston Villa £6,500,000 30 August 2006 [112]
8 Australia Mark Viduka England Leeds United £6,000,000 3 July 2000 [113]
South Korea Ki Sung-Yueng Wales Swansea City 24 August 2012 [114]
10 England Gary Hooper England Norwich City £5,500,000 26 July 2013 [115]

Managerial records

Club records

Matches

Firsts

Wins

  • Record win: 11-0 (against Dundee, 26 October 1895)[128]
  • Record League win: 11-0 (against Dundee, 26 October 1895)[128]
  • Record Scottish Cup win: 8–0 (against Cowlairs, 22 September 1888)[128]
  • Record League Cup win: 10-0 (against Hamilton Academical, 11 September 1968)[128]
  • Record European win: 9–0 (against KPV Kokkola, 16 September 1970)[129][130]

Defeats

Goals

  • Most League goals scored in a season: 116 goals in the 1915-16 season[128]
  • Most goals scored in all competitions in a season: 196 goals in the 1966-67 season[128]

Points

  • Most points in a season (3 points per win): 106 (during the 2016-17 season).[136][137]
  • Most points in a season (2 points per win): 72 (during the 1987-88 season).[138]
  • Fewest points in a season (2 points per win):
    • 21 (during the 1896–97 season over 18 games).[138]
    • 25 (during the 1947-48 season over 30 games).[138]

Attendances

  • Record attendance: 147,365 (against Aberdeen, won 2-1, Hampden Park (N), 24 April 1937). (A record for a Football match in Europe)[1]
  • Record Scottish League home attendance: 83,500 (against Rangers, won 3-0, Celtic Park (H), 1 January 1938).[nb 1][139][140][141]
  • Record European match attendance: 133,961 (against Leeds United, won 2-1, Hampden Park (H), 15 April 1970). (A record for a match in UEFA European competition)[142]

Other records and statistics

  • World record for total number of goals scored in a season (competitive games only): 196 (season 1966-67)[143]
  • UK record for an unbeaten run in professional football: 69 games (60 won; 9 drawn) 16 May 2016 to 17 December 2017.[144]
  • SPL record for an unbeaten run of home matches (League, Europe, Scottish Cup, League Cup) (77), from 2001 to 2004[145][146]
  • 14 consecutive League Cup final appearances, from season 1964/65 to 1977/78 inclusive,[147] a world record for successive appearances in the final of a major football competition[148]
  • Most goals scored in one Scottish top-flight league match by one player: 8 goals by Jimmy McGrory against Dunfermline in 9–0 win on 14 January 1928[149]
  • Highest score in a domestic British cup final: Celtic 7–1 Rangers, Scottish League Cup Final 1957[150]
  • Fastest hat-trick in European Club Football Mark Burchill vs Jeunesse Esch in 2000; 3 minutes (between 12th minute and 15th minute), a record at the time[151][152]
  • Earliest SPL Championship won: won with 8 games remaining in 2017 (equalling all-time Scottish top-flight record set by Rangers in 1929)[153][154]
  • Biggest margin of victory in the SPL. 9–0 against Aberdeen, 6 November 2010[155]
  • Celtic and Hibernian hold the record for the biggest transfer fee between two Scottish clubs. Celtic bought Scott Brown from Hibernian on 16 May 2007 for £4.4m[156]
  • Most expensive export from Scottish football, Moussa Dembélé to Lyon, August 2018, for €22 million (about £19.7 million).[106][157]
  • First weekly club publication in the UK, The Celtic View[158]
  • First European club to field a player from the Indian sub-continent, Mohammed Salim[159]
  • First British club to reach the final of the European Cup, and the only Scottish, and first British team to win the European Cup[160]

European statistics

  • Most appearances in European competition: Scott Brown, 99[59][60][61]
  • Most goals in European competition: Henrik Larsson, 35[161]
  • Biggest win: Celtic 9–0 KPV Kokkola, in the European Cup, 16 September 1970[162][163]
  • Biggest defeat: Barcelona 7–0 Celtic in the UEFA Champions League, 13 September 2016[164]
  • Highest European home attendance (Hampden Park): 136,505, against Leeds United in the 1969–70 European Cup[165][166][nb 2]
(Celtic Park): 77,240, against Fiorentina in the 1969–70 European Cup[167]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Newspaper reports at the time indicate that the officially returned attendance was given as 83,500, with an estimated further 10,000 supporters locked out of the ground for safety reasons. However, the ground's capacity was gauged at the time as being around 88,000 and several subsequent sources (including the club's official website) have since revised the attendance up to 92,000.
  2. The home leg of Celtic's 1970 European Cup semi-final tie against Leeds United was switched from Celtic Park (which had a capacity at the time of around 80,000) to Hampden Park due to the expected high demand for tickets.

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