BRENDAN RODGERS confirmed he would be going nowhere this summer after steering Celtic to the brink of a fourth consecutive championship.
An Aberdeen victory over Rangers this afternoon will confirm Celticâs 13th title in 14 years after the Parkhead side beat Kilmarnock 5-1 at home in their final league match before the split.
Rodgers admitted he was still frustrated at his side throwing away the chance to win it on their own terms after losing to St Johnstone last weekend, but stressed it would still be a sweet moment should rivals Rangers lose at Pittodrie to make it official.
Brendan Rodgers takes the acclaim of the Celtic fans after defeating Kilmarnock

Celtic substitute Anthony Ralston fires home the fifth goal in stoppage time
âI think any time you get over the line, it is (satisfying),â he said. âI am still
frustrated itâs not today if I am honest.
But we canât do anything about that now. Weâve done everything we could do today. And whenever and if it comes, we have to be ready for it. So weâll see what the split brings after this weekend. We have obviously got the semi-final (against St Johnstone), so weâre arriving to that in a great place. We can only do our job.
âIf Aberdeen win tomorrow, then brilliant. Whoever wins the league is always deserving champions. But whatâs important for us was not just to win today, but in a style that this team has shown for most of the season. And that was an incredible reaction to last week.â
Celtic were in devastating form in the first half especially, with Reo Hatate scoring twice and Daizen Maeda and Cameron Carter-Vickers also getting on the scoresheet. Anthony Ralstonâs 90th-minute strike added an extra sheen to the scoreline after Danny Armstrong had got one back for Killie.
Rodgers had demanded a response after his sideâs insipid showing at McDiarmid Park and was more than delighted with what his players gave him.
âIt was perfect,â he added. âItâs what we talked about in the week, about having that winning attitude. You mix that with the talent and thatâs the type of performance we produce. As disappointing as it was last week, I am so happy for the players and the team this week.
âThe performance level was so high, especially in the first half.
âThe connections, the speed in the game, the quality of the football, everything that is good about this Celtic team â that was it today.â
Rodgers was coy on whether he would follow the action from Pittodrie, his only firm commitment to cheer on countryman Rory McIlroy at The Masters.
âI donât know (if he will watch the game),â he added. âI probably wonât, in all fairness. Roryâs had a great start and weâll watch that for sure.â
Rodgers moved to clear up some comments made in his pre-match media conference on Friday where he said every club needs to add âfreshness (around the playing squad). Either that or the manager goesâ.

Hatate fails Maeda after the striker scored Celtic’s second goal against Kilmarnock
But he vowed he would still be around to see out the third and final year of his deal and suggested there might be talks around a possible extension.
âI think if you were sitting in my press conference here on the very first day I arrived, I promised unless I was removed Iâd be here for three years minimum,â he added. âSo nothing changes.
âThereâs absolutely no doubt, unless Dermot (Desmond, Celticâs principal shareholder) tells me differently in the summer, I will be excited and ready for the beginning of the season.
âI was always going to be here for the three years but Iâm sure weâll have a chat of some sort over the course of the summer (about an extension). But for now, itâs focusing on getting the job done.
âItâs been a great, great journey for us up until now. So weâll look to finish in the best way we possibly can.â
Kilmarnock manager Derek McInnes had no gripes about the outcome, believing Celtic in this form are almost unstoppable.
âWhen you actually see Celtic like that, you think, âHow can they lose games? How can they lose games against teams in the league?ââ he asked. âWe got a bit of a run around for long spells.
âItâs hard to take any positives from it.
âI think it was a combination of Celtic upping their levels, playing in a manner which they can for periods of that first half, and us just not being able to cope with that, to be honest.
âThe team that normally wins the league is the team with the biggest investment and has the best squad.â