Saturday, 19 February 2011
Smith backs Diouf to handle Brown feud - Scotsman
• Scott Brown, left, had a running battle with el Hadji diouf at Ibrox
Both players are renowned for having fuses as short as the bristles on their heads. Diouf has made it even more impossible to ignore him having this week dyed blue the narrow strip of hair on his scalp which has escaped the razor blade.
This act will do little to pacify Celtic supporters at Parkhead tomorrow, as their team prepares to host Rangers in a clash which is crucial to both club's title ambitions. These supporters have already installed Diouf as public enemy No 1 after he spat at a home supporter during a Uefa Cup quarter-final clash at Parkhead, while he was at Liverpool.
He was pursued by Brown during the Scottish Cup fifth-round clash between Rangers and Celtic a fortnight ago, before being taunted by the skipper after he had scored the equaliser in the 2-2 draw. Brown stood in front of Diouf with his arms outstretched. Celtic manager Neil Lennon later saluted both the performance and behaviour of his captain - and did so again yesterday.
Smith, however, gave a loaded response to a question which sought to divine the Rangers manager's view of Brown's actions that afternoon at Ibrox. "I'll leave other people to judge whether opposing players' actions were inflammatory or otherwise," he said, before adding that he had no fears about Diouf being caught up in the white heat of his first away match since signing on-loan from Blackburn Rovers on the last day of the transfer window.
Diouf will need to endure a much more hostile atmosphere tomorrow after enjoying a fairly comfortable introduction to Scottish football.
The four matches he has played so far have all been at Ibrox. He has mostly been unmoved by the provocation of opponents and Smith is confident Diouf can again rise above it all tomorrow, when he can expect to be baited by Brown and over 50,000 others. "I didn't speak to him a great deal before the last (Old Firm] game," said Smith. "I had a word with him, not particularly about the match. But he's an experienced enough player to know what's happened and I don't see why we should have a problem there.
"In the games he's played for us the lad hasn't done anything untoward," added Smith. "Sometimes when a player's career has been tainted by a reaction to certain situations that's the picture everybody paints of him. But we can only go by what we've seen. Everybody in an Old Firm game - and not just El Hadji Diouf - has to be aware of how their behaviour (can have an impact]."
Lennon, meanwhile, again gave solid backing to his captain's conduct and said Brown had learned there were certain lines "he cannot cross".
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