Last updated Wednesday 13 May 2026. Celtic arrive at Fir Park this evening for a 7pm kick-off in what is, on paper, a dead rubber for the champions. The title is long since secured, the pressure is off, and that context matters enormously when you are trying to work out what this game actually looks like in terms of structure and output. Motherwell, sitting on 43 points from 36 games, have had a season of two very distinct halves according to the standings data, and the interesting thing is that their underlying profile tells a more complicated story than a mid-table finish might suggest.
The League Context
Celtic sit top of the Scottish Premiership with 77 points from 36 games, which works out to 23 wins, 8 draws and 5 defeats. Their goal difference of plus 32, built on 63 scored and 31 conceded, confirms what the table already shows: this has been a dominant campaign in terms of results, even if they have not been as prolific as the second-placed side, who have scored 67 from the same number of games. The interesting thing about Celtic's numbers is that 8 draws in 36 games for a title-winning side suggests there have been a reasonable number of occasions where the control they typically exercise has not translated into a winning margin. That matters tonight because Motherwell at home, with nothing riding on the result for their opponents, is exactly the kind of fixture where a draw becomes a plausible outcome.
Motherwell's record of 10 wins, 13 draws and 13 defeats from 36 games places them firmly in the middle of the division. Their goal difference of minus 11, with 48 scored and 59 conceded, tells you they are not a side that shuts up shop. They concede, and they contribute to goal activity. That is relevant context for the totals markets.
What the Signals Actually Show
The model has generated three signals for this fixture and it is worth being precise about what each one is actually saying, because the internal logic is not entirely consistent and that is something you need to understand before putting money on anything.
The headline signal is Motherwell to win at 4.60 with Unibet, where the model assigns a 29.9 percent probability against a market-implied probability of 21.7 percent. That is an edge of 8.2 percent, which is the largest edge across the three signals and the only one with a Kelly stake attached. The confidence rating is 33, which is low, and I think that is the honest number here. A 30 percent win probability for the home side against the champions is not an unreasonable position given the end-of-season context, but 33 percent confidence reflects the genuine uncertainty around how much Celtic rotate and how motivated their players are. The 4.60 price does represent value against the implied fair odds of around 4.26, so the arithmetic works. Whether the underlying assumption holds is a separate question.
The Under 2.5 goals signal at 2.43 with Unibet shows a model probability of 45.8 percent against a market-implied 41.2 percent, giving a 4.6 percent edge. The confidence is 46. This is a more cautious position from the model and I would push back on it slightly, because Motherwell's season profile is one of a team that concedes regularly and Celtic, even in low-stakes games, tend to create through their progressive build-up structure. The bet365 price of 2.25 on BTTS Yes being heavily shaded towards the yes outcome is informative here. The market broadly expects goals.
BTTS No at 2.45 with Unibet carries the smallest edge at 1.4 percent, with a model probability of 42.2 percent. This is marginal. An edge of 1.4 percent is within the noise of model error and I would not act on it. The BTTS Yes market pricing at 1.48 to 1.57 across books reflects a fairly strong consensus that both teams are likely to score, and Motherwell's defensive record over 36 games gives you reason to respect that consensus.
The Odds Landscape
Looking across the full odds board, a few things stand out. Celtic scoring zero is priced at 6.50 with bet365, which implies roughly a 15 percent chance of a Celtic shutout. That feels about right for a side of their quality even in rotation mode. The 1:1 correct score is available at 6.50 to 7.00, which is the single most likely individual scoreline on a neutral reading of both teams' profiles. Celtic scoring exactly one goal is priced at 3.20 to 3.25, and two goals at 3.25 across both major books, which suggests the market sees their scoring output tonight as relatively compact rather than expansive.
The first-half BTTS No at 1.25 is an extremely short price and reflects what you would expect: games of this type tend to be cagey in the opening period, with Celtic controlling possession through their build-up play and Motherwell looking to stay compact before the game opens up. The second-half BTTS No at 1.40 is still fairly short, though the 2.70 to 2.75 available on second-half BTTS Yes is more interesting if you believe both teams score but that the first goal does not arrive until after the interval.
My Position
The signal I find most defensible is the Motherwell win at 4.60 as a small-stakes value play, not because I am especially confident Motherwell win this game, but because the market has underpriced them relative to the model and the end-of-season context genuinely does compress the gap between these two sides in terms of what each team is playing for. A 30 percent win probability for the home side at 4.60 is mathematically sound value. I would treat it as a low-stakes position precisely because the confidence sits at 33.
The Under 2.5 and BTTS No signals are pulling in the same direction and the model edge on the Under is reasonable at 4.6 percent. But Motherwell's goals-against total over the season and Celtic's underlying quality suggest the over is the more natural lean. I would not act on either of those signals unless you are very comfortable with the model's assumptions outweighing the raw season data.
The match kicks off at 7pm on Wednesday 13 May. No confirmed lineups or injury updates are available in the current data, which means any late rotation news from Celtic in particular should be factored in before acting on the Motherwell win signal.


