We're up against the best of the best, says Rodgers
Boss Brendan Rodgers believes Celtic will be coming up against the "best of the best" when they take on Paris St Germain on Wednesday night.
Last updated 21st Nov 2017
The Parkhead side lost 5-0 on match day one of their Champions league campaign to the big-spending French club who, with four Group B wins out of four, have already qualified for the knockout stages along with second-placed Bayern Munich.
The French club handed the Hoops their heaviest home European defeat and speaking at the Parc de Princes, Rodgers put his side's task into context while admitting another heavy defeat could happen again.
He said: "We certainly hope we can get a better performance and result.
"We have taken encouragement as the games have gone on.
"Our last performance against Bayern Munich (lost 2-1) was excellent. If you don't get the result, for us, it is about taking pride in the performance. So that is something we hope we can achieve.
"We understand that we are playing against a team that is arguably the best of the best which is a huge challenge for every team they come up against, not just us.
"Their team has a helluva chance of winning the competition, they have big game experience and quality in every position and that includes the bench as well.
When you have the goal threat that this team have, with Neymar, Edinson Cavani, Angel Di Maria and Kylian Mbappe and this type of quality you can go anywhere knowing you can score goals and win games.
"It is a tough ask but for me there are always optimism in the game because there is always so much intent that you can take from them and for us it is about having that personalty and pride in how we play.
"We can be as good as we want to be but it may still happen. You only need to look at their results and how well they beat teams.
"We would like to obviously put up a better show in relation to performance and the scoreline. That is key for us and hopefully we can do that.
Rodgers believes Hoops striker Moussa Dembele will have a "big motivation" when he returns to his former club and tipped the 21-year-old to become one of the best players in the world in time
The Northern Irishman said: "Moussa left Paris when he was 15 and progressed very well for those formative years.
"He made the step out of Fulham to come to us.
"When he left Fulham he wanted to come to a club where he would experience pressure.
"He is playing in front of 60,000 every other week, playing in a team where they have dominance and have the ball and of course, he left to become a winner, winning trophies and getting that feeling of winning and he has done all of those things.
"I have seen a big development in him as a young man and as a player and I really expect him over the coming years to develop and improve and go on to be one of the world's best strikers.
"I have been fortunate in my coaching and managerial career to have worked with some of the best strikers in the world and he is certainly working his way towards being that and hopefully in time he will be one.
"He is still very young, he has shown it for Celtic and France Under-21s and I am sure Didier Deschamps and his staff will be looking at the next step for him, which I believe, will be into the full national team.