Craig Gordon relishing big-match action for club and country

Craig Gordon has no problem with Scotland's season ending so close to the start of Celtic's next campaign as he cannot get enough big-match action.

Celtic goalkeeper Craig Gordon
Published 28th Mar 2017

But the goalkeeper understands that team-mate Scott Brown will have to make a decision based on his own body.

Gordon's career at one stage looked to be over because of a knee injury, but he has returned to top form with club and country and is relishing the World Cup qualifier against England on June 10.

Brown will decide nearer the time whether he is available after coming out of international retirement to help manager Gordon Strachan and the team - a decision vindicated by Sunday's 1-0 win over Slovenia, which breathed new life into Scotland's qualifying hopes.

Celtic begin their Champions League qualifying programme on July 11-12, but Gordon is happy to see one big occasion coming hot on the heels of another after playing one match in almost three and a half years when he should have been reaching his peak.

Scotland goalkeeper Craig Gordon

"I just play in every game I can possibly play in," said Gordon, who was back at Celtic's Lennoxtown training ground promoting Eden Mill as their women's team shirt sponsor.

"There's a sacrifice when you're an international - you don't get as much holiday time. But I had a long spell out the game so I want to play in every game I possibly can between now and the end of my career.

"This season has been great for big games, both at club level and getting into the Champions League, and also the internationals, I have managed to get myself back in the team in the last two (qualifiers).

"It's been a season of big highs for me personally so far so I will just try and keep that going as long as possible."

"It's been a season of big highs for me personally so far so I will just try and keep that going as long as possible."

Brown benefited from a six-week break last summer but his physical improvement surprised even himself, prompting a Scotland U-turn after missing the first three qualifiers.

But Gordon thinks the 31-year-old midfielder will not be the only player whose physical shape might determine Strachan's selection.

The former Hearts and Sunderland player said: "He's a big player but it depends entirely on how he is physically and mentally at the end of a hard season.

"We have still got nine or 10 games to go - he has still got a big effort to put in before then. He is not getting any younger but he will make that decision closer to the time when he knows how he's feeling.

"There will be a lot of us who have had a long, hard season and it might just come down to who is in the best physical shape to go out there and play in that game.

"You can talk about a team so far in advance but you just don't know. There's a lot of football to be played and you never know with injuries."

Previous Celtic boss Ronny Deila gave some of his players staggered time off towards the end of last season with an early start in mind, and current Parkhead manager Brendan Rodgers might have to consider something similar given that six of his players started for Scotland on Sunday.

Gordon said: "There's maybe 10 days to two weeks between the England game and the start of pre-season and then we have friendly matches, and if there are any new signings, you have to get them bedded in.

"It's the manager's job here to sit down and have a look at that and see when everybody comes back in and how they fit everybody into pre-season training. It's a juggling act but one the coaching staff here will have to deal with."

The goalkeeper feels the plethora of Celtic players, who were joined by recent club-mate Charlie Mulgrew, was a major factor in Scotland's return to form.

"Having so many guys from the one team that knew each other, we knew the patterns of play we wanted to achieve and the positions we wanted to get on the ball," the 34-year-old said.

"The way we have been playing just transferred. I think it was a very similar performance to how we have been playing here: full of energy, getting about the other team, trying to get the ball back.

"It was a good performance because everybody knew what they had been doing at club level and could take it into the international game because they knew what the guy next to him was going to be doing."