A MAN who told a young boy he wanted him to perform a sex act if Rangers Football Club won the treble has been handed an extended jail sentence.

John Goodfellow was carrying condoms and Viagra pills when he made the “concerning and disgusting” comments to the teenager earlier this year.

Goodfellow, 58, was chatting to a group of schoolboys at Cockenzie Harbour in June when he said he supported Rangers and backed his team to win all three domestic trophies this season.

One of the boys said he was a Celtic supporter and replied that if the Ibrox club won all three trophies he would give Goodfellow “a pat on the back”.

But Goodfellow, who is on a lifetime Sexual Offenders Prevention Order (SOPO), told the lad he wanted “more than that” and added he wanted the boy to perform the sex act on him.

When police arrived at the popular harbour they found Goodfellow had brought 20 condoms and a bottle of Viagra with him.

Goodfellow previously admitted to directing sexual communications towards the 15-year-old boy for the purposes of obtaining sexual gratification when he appeared from custody at Edinburgh Sheriff Court last month.

He also pleaded guilty to breaching his SOPO by making contact with the teenage boy despite being banned from approaching anyone under the age of 16.

He returned to court last Thursday where Sheriff Donald Corke told him he posed “a high risk of sexual reoffending” with a “particular risk to young boys”.

Sheriff Corke jailed Goodfellow for two years and told him he would be on licence for a further two years when he is released from prison.

Sheriff Corke said: “You have pled guilty to two charges in this indictment. It is clear you pose a high risk of sexual reoffending with a particular risk to young boys.

“It is obvious the only way of dealing with you is a custodial sentence.”

Sheriff Corke also placed Goodfellow on the sex offenders register for an indefinite period.

Previously, the court heard Goodfellow had been placed on the SOPO after he was convicted of a child sex abuse offence at Preston Crown Court in 2005.

Fiscal depute Lorna Ferrier said Goodfellow, originally from Burnley, Lancs, was contacted by his offenders management team on June 28 this year and he had informed them he was in East Lothian on a fishing trip.

The fiscal said Goodfellow was at the harbour at about 2pm where there were several groups of “school-age children” enjoying themselves by diving from the pier into the sea.

Goodfellow’s offenders management team had alerted police to his whereabouts and officers turned up at the harbour later that day. The officers spotted Goodfellow chatting to a group of children and after speaking to him found a discarded bottle of Buckfast nearby.

The officers also discovered that Goodfellow, who has numerous previous convictions for child sex abuse offences, was carrying 20 condoms and a bottle of Viagra tablets.

Solicitor Jim Stephenson, defending, said his client had been prescribed the pills by his doctor and he was carrying the condoms because he was hoping to “start a relationship”. The brief added Goodfellow had “stupidly got involved” with the children.