Celtic enter the 2024–25 Scottish Premiership as odds-on favorites to retain the title, with early advanced models giving Brendan Rodgers’ side a 62 % implied probability of finishing top. Rangers, now under Philippe Clement, are priced at 31 %, while the “best-of-the-rest” cluster—Hearts, Aberdeen and Hibernian—share the remaining 7 % between them. The biggest analytical swing factor is Celtic’s xG sustainability: they out-created opponents by 0.91 per 90 last spring, the largest gap since analytical records began in 2014. Unless Rangers can reduce a porous 1.43 xGA/90 down toward 1.05, the Glasgow gap is projected to widen by eight points.
Relegation forecasting is tighter. Ross County’s squad value fell 18 % after summer out-contracts, pushing their drop probability to 38 %, narrowly ahead of Kilmarnock (30 %) and promoted Dundee United (26 %). St Johnstone’s aggressive recruitment of four loanees from Premier League academies has chopped their own relegation odds from 22 % to 14 % in the updated Monte Carlo simulation.
Turning to the national team, Steve Clarke’s Euro 2024 dark horses are poised for a stronger Nations League run. Elo-based projections give Scotland a 71 % chance to top League A Group 1 (featuring Netherlands, Hungary and Serbia) and secure a 2026 World Cup play-off place. The attacking trio of McGinn, Adams and Christie is expected to average 1.67 goals per 90 across the September–November window, with set-piece routines—responsible for 44 % of Scotland’s goals in qualifying—likely to remain the competitive edge.
Key injuries could flip scripts: if Tierney or Robertson misses more than 30 % of fixtures, the model discounts Scotland’s group-win likelihood by 9 % and pushes Rangers’ title odds down 3 % due to domestic fatigue factors. Meanwhile, emergent data on youth minutes—Scotland U-21s contributed 11,214′ in the 2023–24 SPFL—hints at a talent conveyor that may peak just in time for the 2030 World Cup bid.
Bottom line: betsmart algorithms label a Celtic–Scotland double as value at 3.75 – 1, but watch Robertson’s hamstring and Ross County’s transfer deadline; both micro-events carry macro-impacts in the ever-fluid world of Scottish football prediction.













