Champions League Qualifiers preview: Celtic vs Nõmme Kalju.

So tomorrow night Celtic entertain the visit of the illustrious champions of Estonia to our home ground in the 2nd round, 1st leg of the Champions League qualifiers.

Having disposed of FK Sarajevo 5-2 on aggregate in the 1st round it was pretty much expected that we would then be matched up with North Macedonian champions Shkendija after they had triumphed 1-0 away in Estonia in the first leg.

Byt the plucky Nõmme stunned everyone by turning it all around via a 2-1 win in Toše Proeski Arena, situated in the heart of the Macedonian capital of Skopje.

It’s pretty safe to say that they are pretty surprised to be here themselves.

Last season they won the Estonian top league (The Meistriliiga) for only the second time in their history thanks to a fantastic campaign that saw them go unbeaten through 36 league games with 25 wins and 11 draws, scoring an incredible 114 league goals into the bargain.

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Goal machine Liliu.

Alas, the 2019 season has not been so kind and they currently sit in 4th spot, 12 points behind leaders Flora having already lost two of the first 20 league games and have only scored 34 goals.

Brazilian marksman Liliu remains their top domestic scorer with nine goals in the league thus far but that’s way down on the 31 he bagged last season. Though he did head in the injury-time winner against Shkendija so safe to say he’s their dangerman.

They are also without title-winning manager Sergey Frantsev who was fired early in this years campaign after a poor start which seems a tad harsh considering the historic feats he led them to in 2018 but if Claudio Ranieri can get sacked after winning the title with Leicester then I guess anything can happen in modern football.

His replacement is the Ukranian Roman Kozhukhovskyi whose achievements are so vast he doesn’t even warrant a Wikipedia page.

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Roman Kozhukhovskyi. At least that’s what it says on the screen.

Squad wise it’s pretty much all domestic players save the aforementioned Liliu and club captain Maximiliano Uggè who hails from Treviglio, Italy and has racked up over 60 appearances for them though it’s difficult to quantify as details and stats on Estonian football are pretty thin on the ground.

Outside of those two, the other one to watch would be playmaker Igor Subbotin who provided 16 assists last year.

All that aside we really should be hammering them.

Scotland’s UEFA club coefficient is not great at 26 out of 55 – it was in the top 10 a decade ago – but Estonia’s is at 42.

Individually Celtic are placed at number 46 whilst Nõmme are at 288. By comparison, Sarajevo are rated at 231 though Shkendija place at 178 so perhaps it is all somewhat misleading.

They also play in a 650 seater stadium attracting crowds of a few hundred and lat season truly was an anomaly.

They are unbeaten in their last 16 domestic games as they begin to refind the form of last year though have drawn their last three, scoring only two goals in the process.

We’ve spent well over ÂŁ10 million so far this summer acquiring the talents of Christopher Jullien, Luca Connell and Boli Bolingoli-Mbombo with Hatem Abd Elhamed also on the verge of singing at the time of writing and as a club are on a completely different level to the Estonians to such an extent that our visit next week has been compared to a Metallica rock concert by the mayor of Tallinn.

Even if we’d been drawn against the far bigger Estonian clubs such as FC Flora or FCI Levadia Tallinn – who between them have pretty much dominated Estonian football over the past quarter of a century – we’d still be expecting to skelp them so it should be the case even more so with the diminutive Nõmme Kalju.

So in summation…..no excuses.

Let’s hope we deliver the goods on what looks like it’ll be a balmy summer evening tomorrow in the east end of Glasgow and put the tie to bed with either Israel’s Maccabi Tel-Aviv or Romanian champions Cluj presenting a far more daunting task in the 3rd round.

Celtic 2 – 1 Rangers: When the dust has settled!

I was meant to stick up this post-match article yesterday but alas I partook in a little too much alcohol on Sunday during and after the match and was in no fit state.

Celtic of course claimed three points to move 13 points clear at the top of the league and with only seven league games remaining it’s all pretty much over bar the shouting.

There is plenty of shouting though. Most of it coming from Govan int he wake of the blue half of Ibrox’s 11th defeat in the past 14 encounters with the men in hoops.

To the game itself and Celtic came out of the blocks flying and laid siege to the Rangers goal. Allan McGregor produced a few decent saves and there was a feeling of inevitability about the whole thing. Morelos was effectively cut off up the park and their midfield was pinned back by our constant advances. As expected their right side was targeted with Tavernier a definite weak link in any defensive shape. I was slightly puzzled by the decision to start Jonny Hayes when the experience of Scott Sinclair or the breakneck pace of Oli Burke would have appeared more appropriate but in fairness, he put in a shift and as the half progressed his delivery from set pieces improved.

When a superb first-time pass from Forrest in his own half released Edouard you could only see it ending one way as the Frenchman put Joe Worrall on his back legs as he bore down on goal before finishing superbly.

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French Eddy makes his mark.

Celtic continued the onslaught thereafter and just after the half-hour mark and only four mins after the goal, Alfredo Morelos underlined his fantasy ÂŁ25 million price tag by lashing out at Scott Brown and receiving his fifth red card of the season. The replays showed Brown had slightly clipped his heels but to claim that it was anything more than minor gamesmanship on the Celtic captain’s part is grasping at straws. Morelos is as predictable as he is overrated and just can’t help himself.

Not surprisingly thereafter Celtic continued to dominate with Allan McGregor producing a fine first-half save from a fierce effort from Tierney and then again in the second half when he kept out Sinclair – a half time substitute for the injured Hayes – after the English winger had played a wonderful one-two with Callum McGregor on the edge of the box.

Mikael Lustig then tried his luck from distance but his effort whizzed past and from that point onwards Celtic seemed to fall asleep somewhat. With our visitors on the back feet and down to ten men as well as needing a goal – or two if they genuinely harboured any real remaining ambitions to win the league –  this really was an opportunity to turn them over.

Instead, Celtic’s urgency evaporated and it looked like the cigars and brandy were out figuratively speaking.

From about the 60 minute mark onwards, Rangers came back into it and clearly sensed an opportunity. In a press conference yesterday Steven Gerrard claimed they dominated the game and were the better team for 55 mins. Absolute nonsense. The only reason they even came back into it is that we let them but still they were the better team for that final half hour.

Their best player Ryan Kent cut inside Boyata and finished well on 63 mins to put them back on an even pegging. Incidentally, Boyata had a bit of a nightmare all day and eventually limped off.

Rangers actually looked the more likely to score at that stage and Ryan Jack passed up a great chance to put them ahead when Kent cut the ball back to him from the byline but he hit it high, wide and handsome over the bar.

It was in the balance and you couldn’t help but wonder how the hell we’d got ourselves into this predicament when to our great relief that man Tavernier released a loose pass on the right flank and McGregor was onto it like a shot before releasing Edouard who set-up Forrest to slam home the winner on 86 minutes.

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Kent makes his mark.

There was one particularly hairy moment at the end – not including the fact Ryan Kent should have got a straight red for a shove to the face on Brown in the aftermath of the Forrest goal – when Ajer had to make an incredible challenge to prevent Joe Worrall from knocking the ball into an empty net after more good wing play from Kent who had tested Scott Bain with a stinging strike.

Ajer was a real lion for Celtic all day and especially in the final five minutes or so when we had to baton down the hatches. He really had to be though as Boyata was in bomb scare form all afternoon. His injury means he is probably out for the rest of the season and therefore it’s likely the last time we’ll see him in a Celtic jersey. To be honest that doesn’t really upset me. Boyata had his moments but produced too many calamitous ones for my liking and I wish him well for the future wherever he ends up.

The three points were achieved and I guess that’s what is most important but on the whole, I’m somewhat disappointed. We had a chance to really put Rangers to the sword and put Gerrard under massive pressure. Instead due to poor game management, we let their ten men back into it and now due to the circumstances, they have emerged with a moral victory of sorts. At least that’s the vibe they are giving off.

Once again it was a close one that required a late winner and I remain completely unconvinced that Neil Lennon should be our manager next season. Metting him later on that night in Tennent’s bar where he refused to get his picture taken with me and some friends – in fairness we aren’t the best-looking bunch of guys – has perhaps coloured that a little but in truth, I just think it reeks of lack of ambition and regression. Let’s not forget Hibs deemed him not good enough to remain as their manager only two months ago. And the football we’ve seen so far since his return has been enough but no more.

Of course, if he gets it – and barring a calamitous failure not to win the treble again I think it’s a stick on – I’ll support him but I don’t think anyone should be surprised if the overall quality of the product denigrates with the appointment over the next few years. As much as we loathe him now Brendan Rodgers was a consummate professional and highly thought of within the game. Lenny just isn’t on either count and there’s only so much you can claw that back with passion and commitment to the cause.

Of course, also hovering over the game is the usual nonsense talk about sectarian violence etc. There were six arrests in and around the stadium out of a crowd of just shy of 59,000. Talk about a storm in a teacup.

In the city centre, there were some battles and three Celtic fans have ended up in hospital, one of whom is in a critical condition. That’s horrendous and he has my hopes and prayers but trying to attribute that to a game taking place several miles way is stretching it.

Scottish Police Federation vice-chairman David Hamilton has waded in with nonsensical talk about how it’s worse than it’s ever been and has even said players need to improve their behaviour.  He also washes the police’s hands of it claiming they receive little back from the clubs. He forgets of course that the 59,000 or so supporters inside the stadium are all taxpayers, pay his wages and his force’s responsibility don’t stop at the doors of private property. You’re a public servant Hamilton. You’re not doing us a favour by doing your job.

Anyway, no doubt that will grow arms and legs in the coming days and weeks as the SNP once again try to force through another ludicrous behaviour bill.

In the meantime let’s take in the highly original perspective offered on events by the good people over at ‘Gers TV’. Top notch stuff:

Hearts 1 – 2 Celtic: Lenny is back with a bang.

So ‘Neil Lennon: Celtic Manager’ the sequel kicked off last night and in some fashion.

Almost inevitably the follow up to the original which departed theatres back in the summer of 2014 was to get its big premiere at Tynecastle stadium, the very arena which has saw the Lurgan man pelted with a coin, assaulted by a fan who ran onto the touchline from the stands and where he has also recorded many a fine victory down the rough the years including a 7-0 Scottish Cup mauling back in December 2013.

Right from the get-go, the Jambos were in our faces with Jamie Brandon, in particular, kicking anything in green and white that crossed his path.

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The Celtic fans continue to back the Bhoys.

Both sides had some decent passages of play and chances but it was Celtic who opened the lead with a wonderful break on 36 mins which saw Sinclair break down the left wing and feed it through to Burke who rather than go for goal himself passed it through to Forrest who placed it into an empty net due to Hearts keeper Zlamal’s attention being on big Oli instead.

On 44 mins the aforementioned Brandon got a straight red for an outrageous aerial clattering of Toljan and with that it looked all over bar the shouting.

But a suicidal pass from our keeper Scott Bain in the second half led to Ajer giving away a penalty which was converted by Oliver Bozanic.

It looked like it would be two points dropped and the heat really on as Rangers were pounding hapless Dundee 4-0 at Ibrox but a nicely dinked ball by Scott Brown from outside the box deep into injury time evaded the head of John Souttar and fell kindly for the ‘Eiffel Rifle’ Odsonne Edouard and he buried it accordingly.

It was kind of surreal seeing Neil Lennon leaping around in joy over at the touchline and you’d be forgiven for thinking he had a DeLorean parked outside so retro was the whole picture but hopefully, this is a sight we become accustomed to over the next few months that being Lenny celebrating.

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Guess who’s back……?

We needed that win last night after the events that had transpired only 24hrs before with the sudden departure of our manager to a mid-table club down south but Neil Lennon really needed it. If we’d dropped any points then the press would have been surrounding him like harbour sharks.

There was some irony in that it was the slow build up play from the back which Brendan Rodgers had been so insistent on during his time at the club which almost undid us.

Lennon now has a chance to get onto the training pitch and implement some of his own ideas which I hope will include ditching this mentality that Brendan introduced of the ball having to be constantly recycled at the back and any direct routes to goal being called off limits no matter what the circumstances or the opposition.

The victory means we retain our eights points lead at the top of the table with ten games left.

Anything other than a win last night would have given encouragement to our rivals – of which there is only really one left now in the title race – and would have fed into the narrative that we were a club in crisis and imploding from the inside.

Not just the win but the nature of it were important almost beyond words and this was a great way for Neil Lennon to reacquaint himself with both the players and the fans. The outpouring of joy amongst the faithful and from the team was universal.

Of course off the field much is being made about ‘sectarian chanting’ from our end and another idiot throwing a coin. Strange that they don’t mention the ‘pedo’ chants from the honourable Hearts fans or the other bile that usually emanates from the stands at Tynecastle which is trumped only by the hymn sheet at Ibrox in its venom. Yes, let’s all just pretend this a west coast of Scotland problem shall we?! Total and utter nonsense.

Anyway, now move onto another vital game – let’s face it they are all vital at this point in the season – against Hibs in the quarter-final of the Scottish Cup on Saturday evening at Easter Road.  Our hosts are a team that our new manager – well newish anyway – knows well as he was managing them up to only four weeks ago.

They themselves are going through a purple patch under their new manager, the unfortunately titled Paul Heckingbottom, and have won three games on the spin including a 2-1 win last night at McDiarmid Park against St.Johnstone where they came from a goal down and a sending off to take the three points.

It isn’t going to be easy. Certain players in the Hibs team will have something to prove to their ex-manager with Florian Kamberi, who was the alleged instigator of the supposed player revolt against Lennon at Easter Road, in particular, likely to be going the extra mile.

But the Treble Treble is within our grasp and at the helm, we have a man who lives and breathes the club and clearly has some idea of what he’s doing considering he had a 70% win ratio from 227 games the last time he was in charge so let’s continue to pull behind him and onto victory.

Europa League analysis: Celtic superb against Red Bull and now off to the Tony Macaroni.

Well, that was glorious, wasn’t it?

The European performance we’ve all been waiting for from Brendan’s side.

A full 90 mins of passions, desire, precision and above all an end product.

In many ways, it reminded me of our display at home in the Champions League against Bayern Munich last season where we pushed them all the way and deserved victory but somehow came away with a defeat. However this time we got our just rewards.

RB Leipzig were a really good side. Shorn of talents such as star striker Timo Werner, his strike partner Yussuf Poulsen and playmaker Emil Forsberg they still fielded a front three of Bruma, Cunha and Jean-Kévin Augustin who cost a total of €38 million.

They were strong, accurate in the pass and aggressive from the get-go in a way that I hoped we would be but sometimes you just have to accept you’re up against a really good side who sit fourth – a point behind second – in the Bundesliga for a reason.

Celtic gradually got back into the game and a strong run by the in-form Forrest led to a ball spraying across the box where it was met on the left by Kieran Tierney who steadied himself before driving home.

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The Bhoys celebrate the opener.

We then dominated most of the first half but were unable to make the pressure count and Rogic placed one over the bar from the edge of the box after it was laid on by Christie that you would usually fancy him to do better with.

In the second half, the match followed the same pattern with two talented and energetic teams going at it. The post-match possession showed Celtic with 47% and Leipzig with 53% underlining just how evenly matched the contest was though for the best part the Germans were reduced to speculative long-range efforts which whilst always dangerous never really concerned Craig Gordon. However, he did have to make a terrific save from a corner which was met well at the front post by Marcel Sabitzer.

Up the other end Scott Sinclair raced through on goal not long after but failed to pull the trigger and then Edouard harried his way into the box and you thought he’d scored only for the ball to shave the post after taking the slightest nick off keeper Yvon Mvogo’s leg.

You just started to get the feeling it might not be our night with chances like that not being converted.

And that feeling became a reality when Augustin rose to impressively head home a pinpoint cross from Konrad Laimer that caught Lustig sleeping at the back post.

But alas said feeling only lasted 14 seconds as Celtic went rampaging up the pitch from the restart and Ryan Christie crossed for French Eddy to tap home from point-blank range to make it 2-1.

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My thoughts exactly Odsonne.

There were some hairy moments thereafter with Youssouf Mulumbu entering the stage and contributing a chaotic 10 mins in which he looked miles off the pace and continuously misjudged passes and tackles. From this Leipzig were able to break into the box and Kevin Kampl nearly broke the crossbar with a thunderous strike. They say you need a rub of the green to win on nights like this and that was definitely ours.

Anyway, with a great sigh of relief, that’s how it finished and now Celtic need to win in Trondheim against Rosenborg in three weeks to go into the final group game with our hopes of qualification intact. A win there coupled with a Salzburg victory at home to Leipzig would mean the Austrians go into the final group game on 15 points with the group sewn up and likely to rest players for their trip to Glasgow. A draw actually makes them group winners as well so really Leipzig have to win that one. If they do then it’s a straight shootout between us and Salzburg in the final game with Celtic requiring to win 2-0 to progress from a very tough group where Rosenborg have thus far only been spectators. Incredibly though they too can still qualify as well. If they beat us by more than a goal and then give the Germans a pasting at the Red Bull Arena on Matchday Six then they’ll the ones to progress which would be incredible. So let’s hope that doesn’t happen.

Anyway, what a display. So many great performances. Christie is banishing all pining for the departed Stuart Armstrong with his sudden emergence, Forrest is on fire, Rogic was relatively quiet – clearly identified as the danger man and subsequently shackled –  but still looks a class apart at times, Sinclair is refinding his form, McGregor is playing out of his skin, Benkovic looks terrific at the back – shame we can’t keep him – and Tierney was the star man as he relentlessly rampaged up the left-hand side all night.

A fantastic performance that conjured up memories of the heady European nights enjoyed under Martin O’Neill, Gordon Strachan and Neil Lennon and the first time a Brendan Rodgers side has really put it together for 90 mins against top-level continental opposition who were really on their game.

Oh and let’s not forget the much-maligned disco lights which actually helped ramp up the pre-match atmosphere and created a pretty magnificent aesthetic.

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The disco lights played their part.

Anyway, it’s onto tough tackling Livingston for an early kick-off at the idyllic Tony Macaroni Arena on Sunday. A nice little venue that I’ve been to a few times before though back when it was only just called Almondvale.

Livi got off to a flyer under new player-manager Kenny Miller this season that saw him leave after about 20 mins only to be replaced by blink and you’ll miss him ex-Celt Gary Holt who formed part of the memorable Hamilton Cup winning side under Lou Macari back in the balmy summer of 1994 over in Canada.

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That’s Gary down the front with the big trophy. 

He guided the West Lothian side to a pretty remarkable seven league unbeaten run with five wins and two draws which included drawing at Tynecastle and defeating Steven Gerrard’s juggernaut 1-0 at home.

However, they have had a recent reality check with back to back defeats at home to St.Johnstone and away to Hamilton.

Still, expect a tough and physical encounter on a pretty piss poor artificial surface that has more sand on it than a beach in Largs and more pellets than a neglected rabbit’s hutch.

Then we enter the dreaded international break that no one is interested in that will likely see Alex McLeish make more bizarre tactical decisions.

But we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.

Until then let’s bask in the warm afterglow of our best European display in years.

 

 

 

International round-up: Israel 2 – 1 Scotland. Absolute garbage!

The big adventure continued under Alex McLeish last night and took the national team plus about 1500 weary souls to the cavernous and mostly empty Sammy Ofer Stadium in Haifa, Israel for the latest instalment of the UEFA Nations League.

There they were subjected to some of the worst football we’ve seen from a Scotland national team in a long, long time.

Now that really is saying something.

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The face of the Scotland national team.

Getting beaten by World Cup qualifiers such as Costa Rica, Peru, Mexico and hammered by the second best national team in the world in Belgium is one thing but Israel are rated 96 in the FIFA rankings and had one win in ten coming into this.

They have some very good players at their disposal such as former Celtic midfielder Beram Kayal, now with Brighton in the EPL, as well as the prolific Red Bull Salzburg striker Munas Dabbur who we know all about after his shenanigans a week ago last night against us in the Europa League.

But the fact remains that they seldom if indeed ever pull it together at national team level until they met Scotland of course.

Scotland were rubbish from the get-go. The nonsense of trying to deploy both Andy Robertson and Kieran Tierney down the same flank continues and nullifies the abilities of both. That aside it appeared to be five at the back with a deep-lying midfield and the two strikers completely cut off.

Scotland never pressed the ball at all until going behind in the second half and generally sat deep allowing the Israeli team to ping the ball about in front of them like a classic Brazil team and build both momentum and confidence.

A gift was handed out in the 23rd minute when Peretz needlessly barged Naismith to the ground in the box. Charlie Mulgrew subsequently stepped up and converted and you thought that might actually breathe some life into the Scotland performance but instead, it seemed to fire up the hosts who proceeded to subject the Scottish goal to wave after wave of attack for the remainder of the game.

Peretz made up for his earlier misdemeanour by equalising on 54 minutes which was long overdue and after Souttar walked for a second yellow – his first was mindless and second came from his mistake – there was only going to ever be one outcome and it happened when a hopelessly out of position Tierney scored an OG he’d like to forget with about of a quarter of an hour left.

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John Souttar is the only shocked man on the pitch.

Allan McGregor made save after save and Israel hit the bar when they should have scored and 2-1 flattered Scotland. Despite that Callum McGregor had a few chances to actually pull something out of the fire but shanked them both which was a continuation of his finishing against Albania.

Disjointed, disorganised, fatigued and ultimately dispirited just about sums up Scotland last night as they made it five defeats from seven under Alex McLeish with a first competitive defeat in 23 months.

Players such as Kevin McDonald and Johnny Russell appear to be getting games for no reason whatsoever. McDonald is playing in a Fulham team that are being trounced most weeks and Johnny Russell is playing in the retirement village that is the MLS at 28 and even then is hardly setting the heather alight.

They now play Portugal at Hampden on Monday night which will likely be attended by ten men and a dog and anyone who thinks Portugal don’t have the potential to destroy Scotland without the presence of the scandal-mired Cristiano Ronaldo are sadly mistaken. Portugal won 3-2 away in Poland last night and even without their talisman, they are a handy outfit rated seventh in the world.

Though a right hammering might not be such a bad thing as it might force the SFA’s hand vis-Ă -vis the ongoing farcical second reign of McLeish which hit a new low last night and considering his inability to make any actual big decisions, implement anything approaching a system and his alienation of some of the countries best players a decision really needs to be made sooner rather than later.

Under the previous manager, Scotland had gone unbeaten in seven – six of them competitive – whilst under Big Eck they have lost five in seven scoring four and conceding ten. Expect that to be even worse after Monday evening.

In the post-match press conference, Alex thought the system was actually working in the first half, that the team had kept possession okay and John Souttar’s red card was harsh. He also said he was about to bring on Scott McKenna for Souttar just before he got his second yellow even though McKenna was already on the pitch having been substituted on for the injured Charlie Mulgrew at half-time………………………………

God help us!