Celtic manager Ange Postecoglou is still waiting for hamstring injury pair Kyogo Furuhashi and David Turnbull to complete their rehab after both were named in his Europa Conference League squad.
And he's ready to introduce the one January signing yet to make his debut to the first-team squad soon with a route being planned for teenager Johnny Kenny.
Kyogo went off injured against St Johnstone on Boxing Day while Turnbull had to go off in the Premier Sports Cup Final earlier in December.
Yosuke Ideguchi is also back in training after being injured against Alloa
And speaking to Celtic TV, the manager said: "Yosuke is training with the group. He won’t be ready for Wednesday but should be alright for the weekend which is promising.
"We're getting to that point (full strength). It's only been in the last few days.
"We've still got Kyogo and David Turnbull to get through their rehab.
"And young Johnny Kenny is getting to a space where he can train with us.
"And it's going to be important, we're still in three competitions. We want to do well in all three and we're going to need a strong squad to get there."
Postecoglou was dismayed last year when the hare-brained Super League project emerged from football's swamp of bad ideas.
And that's why he's delighted to be succeeding at a club like the current Premiership table toppers.
The Parkhead side were in a completely different place when the project was announced and the Aussie gaffer got philosophical as he was asked about the rampant commercialisation of the game and some richer clubs straying from their values.
Postecoglou said: "Good football clubs, strong football clubs still understand.
"There's always going to be this fight between the traditional, core values of a football club and what we know as commercialisation and you need resources to make sure football clubs grow.
"But you've seen it in the past, whenever a club goes too far away from its roots there's inevitably a backlash.
"They realise, 'okay, this is not who we are'. And the supporters are usually the ones who will bring it back to earth.
"We saw in the game in general when they tried to mess with the European Super League and everything like that last year.
"A lot of these decisions are made in boardrooms with people who are fairly like minded. They don't have the diversity a football supporter base has.
"I still think the really strong clubs with traditional values will stay close to who they are because the supporters won't let them get too far away from that."