Four. Celtic, Rangers, Partick Thistle and Queens Park are all senior teams that are based in Glasgow.
No.
Glasgow rangers
Of all the Scottish football questions this, for some, is the most contentious. It is therefore best not to leave it to the partisan support for the answer, rather go to the ultimate world football authority FIFA. FIFA explain that Rangers are the more successful of the two Glasgow giants. Both have won a European trophy, both are very successful at home. However, Glasgow Rangers are deemed the most successful as stats show they have won their domestic championship more times than their opposition Glasgow Celtic. FIFA also confirm that Glasgow Rangers are the most successful domestic team on record as they have won more Domestic Championships than any other professional league team.
Just a guess but it might be Glasgow. In football there is Parkhead (Celtic), Hampden (Queen's Park) and Ibrox (Rangers). So far as I am aware each of the 3 holds more than 50,000 fans and all are seated. By- the-bye the plural of stadium is stadia.
He scored 251 league goals, and a total of 355 in all competitions.
Ibrox Stadium, originally Ibrox Park, home of Glasgow Rangers.
Bob McPhail - 261 goals in 408 appearances between 1927 and 1940.
none of them they are all pish especially hearts
Glasgow Celtic having the largest stadium capacity have a weekly crowd of 60,000 . Next is Glasgow Rangers at 50,000. Glasgow Rangers have the largest fanbase in Scotland and the fourth largest in UK at 1.5M (Man Utd = 4.3M, Liverpool = 3.2M, Arsenal = 2.3M, Rangers 1.5M, Chelsea 1.45M, Celtic = 1.4m).
Van Bronckhorst, Larsson and ...
I can only assume that you mean blue and green with regards to certain football (soccer) teams. Glasgow Rangers play in blue shirts while Glasgow Celtic play in green and white hoops. This doesn't actually mean much outside of Glasgow. Even in Glasgow among supporters of Partick Thistle and Queen's Park (Glasgow's other football clubs) blue and green mean not a lot. They are only colours after all. But it's the conotations.