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Scottish football is like ‘time travel’ with Celtic & Rangers levels above

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Bogdan, 36, arrived on-loan at Hibs from Liverpool during the 2018/19 campaign after an injury to No.1 Ofir Marciano. And he went on to make 25 appearances for the club.

However, after enduring a lingering concussion, he found himself displaced from his position. By the time he recovered, Lennon had been let go, and he never had the chance to play for Hibs again.

The Hungarian stopper still has regrets about the ending to his time in Leith as he went on to have a three-year spell at Ferencvaros before becoming a free agent last summer. 

Yet he is glad he got to experience how different the Scottish top-flight is, with Hibs facing “Premier League” teams like Celtic or Rangers one week then going head-to-head against club’s of English League One standard the next. 

READ MORE: Celtic transfer twist as Kettlewell responds to Kelly link

 

Speaking on Ladbrokes’ Fanzone, he said: “The Hibernian move is a funny one because I went there, but I didn’t want to go there.

“At that time, I didn’t want to move further north than Manchester, and then Neil Lennon called me. He explained that his first-choice goalkeeper had an injury which wasn’t really healing, so he needed someone to come in. I obviously knew him from my time at Bolton.

“When I went to Hibs, I fell in love with the city straight away. Edinburgh, for me, was so perfect and compact, we just fell in love with the place.

“And then, to play for one of the top teams in Edinburgh, in such a nice stadium… for me, it was like the two perfect worlds had met, finally, in my life. I was in a really nice city with so much history and culture, and I was playing for a great team.

“The Scottish league is funny because it’s a little bit like a time-travel, sometimes. You know, some places you’d travel to and the games you’d be involved in…there was lots of playing long, and second balls.

“But then you play against Celtic, who are more like a Premier League team, and then Rangers, in front of 50,000 people. Then you go away to another game, where the standard feels more like League One, or League Two football. You get everything in Scotland, but I really enjoyed my time up there.

READ MORE: Rangers must handle title race ‘pressure’ amid decisive Celtic clash

“Aside from getting relegated with Bolton, the only other real heartbreak I had in my career was with Hibs. The concussion I suffered was so strange because, although it didn’t look too serious at the time, I couldn’t get out of it for months. 

“In that time, I lost my place in the team, and then Neil Lennon got sacked, and so all of a sudden it just didn’t feel the same anymore.

“Then I found myself without a club for six months. I’d had offers, but I didn’t want to take them because I knew I wanted to live in a place where the lifestyle was as good as the football, so I was prepared to wait.

“I went back to Hibs in the December of 2019, which I was really, really happy about. I couldn’t wait to get started, and then COVID came and the league got cancelled!”

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