After a shambolic exit in Europe to Copenhagen, the Celts prepare for St.Johnstone in the cup.

Well, Thursday night was a bit of an unmitigated disaster.

Image result for celtic 1-3 copenhagen
Yep…..this just about sums it up.

On a night eerily similar to our capitulation against Cluj in the Champions League qualifiers way back in August Celtic showed once again that in European competition we still completely lack game management when ahead in a knockout tie.

Just like against Cluj we were ahead due to an away goal yet couldn’t see out the tie.

And also just like gainst Cluj we shot ourselves in the foot more than once.

After a pretty dominant first half where a patient Copenhagen refused to show their hand and where we passed up several good opportunities, you could only see one team progressing.

Six minutes into the second half though Jozo Simunovic had a ‘Jozo moment’ as he dithered on the ball and allowed Michael Santos to mug him before big Chris Jullien then panicked and ultimately Santos put the ball in the net.

A total gift.

Though how we ever allowed ourselves to be in a two on two situation in the first place at home in a tie where we were ahead is beyond me.

From then on we struggled and you just knew it wasn’t going to be our night but then out of nowhere we got a penalty thanks to VAR after Ragnar Sigurdsson had needlessly handled in the box.

Image result for celtic 1-3 copenhagen
The celebrations were short-lived. 

That man Odsonne Edouard stepped up and executed the spot-kick with aplomb and suddenly we were back in this.

But in almost identical fashion to the game against the Romanian champions over six months ago, we then handed the advantage back to the visitors who scored through Pep Biel only two minutes later with Celtic’s defending completely shambolic.

Dame N’Doye then farcically sauntered through our meek backline minutes after that to make it 3-1 and complete the embarrassment.

So that’s that then.

A campaign that showed so much promise with a superb display in the group stages ultimately went the same way as the last three times we’ve gone into the Last 32 stage that being with us going out with a whimper.

To make matters worse the tournament has totally opened up too with big names like Benfica, Porto, Ajax, Arsenal, Sporting Lisbon and Red Bull Salzburg all exiting as well.

Indeed Copenhagen have been drawn against İstanbul BaĹźakĹźehir in the Last 16 which looks at a totally winnable tie and could have been us but alas………..

Oh and of course Rangers quite comfortably navigated their way through earlier in the week against far tougher opposition. On the bright side, it means we have a week of rest leading up to the next Old Firm game whilst they don’t but that’s scant consolation.

So it’s back to domestic action and the pursuit of the ‘Quadruple-Treble’ as Celtic visit McDiarmid Park tomorrow afternoon.

Image result for tommoy wright st.johnstone
Big Tommy is waiting.

We should be pretty confident considering we’ve won our last seven ties against St.Johnstone with an aggregate score of 26-0 which has included a 7-0 and 3-0 in our last two games against them.

They are actually in pretty good form at the moment with no losses in their last six games and only two losses in their last 15 domestic matches with seven wins and six draws.

Sixteen goals in their last eight games also shows their recent attacking prowess and Stevie May has refound his shooting boots during that period netting five times over that spell.

Their last game saw them battle to a 2-2 draw at home to Rangers too so they’ll go into this tie confident based on recent form and also hoping to take advantage of our European hangover.

I foresee us returning to a  3-5-2 with Griffiths starting upfront with Edouard and on reflection, we should maybe have gone with that on Thursday night from the start but everyone has a degree in hindsight of course.

Alas, a chance for our longest European cup run in sixteen years is gone.

More domestic trophies will have to suffice.

 

International round-up: Scotland 1 – 3 Portugal. Nothing to see here.

Another international match under Alex McLeish and another defeat.

The reason I bother with these international reviews is because our players generally feature pretty significantly in proceedings.

For this one, Kieran Tierney was allowed to drop out due to a ‘loading issue’ which is bullshit football ‘tech-speak’ for him being tired due to the number of games he’s played so far this season.

No doubt Brendan’s been on the phone and requested that he be rested as opposed to being played out of position in a pointless friendly.

Leigh Griffiths, of course, hasn’t featured in the last two internationals now as he tries to improve his fitness. Of course, we know the real reason is that he can’t stand Big Eck and his banal ongoing decision to choose Johnny Russell and Steven Naismith up front ahead of him.

Craig Gordon was back in after being fairly dropped for the on form Allan McGregor and also back in the line-up was James Forrest, ludicrously not started against Israel after scoring four times for us the weekend before, and ex-Celt Stuart Armstrong. Callum McGregor also got his latest cap. Jack Hendry also got a start which was purely due to Charlie Mulgrew and John Souttar being unavailable.

On the whole, it was much better performance though ultimately another bad result as the ruthless Portuguese punished every error from Scotland, proving that even without the scandal-plagued Ronaldo why they are rated number seven in the world rankings.

Image result for scotland portugal
Just another day at the office.

Portugal’s goals came in the following order:

  • HĂ©lder Costa (43′minutes),
  • Macedo Lopes (74′minutes),
  • TuĂ© Na Bangna (84′minutes)

Costa’s was a tap-in after an Andy Robertson mistake but the other two were fabulous goals. A great header from Lopes after a floated cross to the edge of the box and a peach from Banga just inside the box subsequent to skinning Graeme Shinnie.

Stevie Naismith posted a consultation at the death resulting from a beautiful back-heel from another ex-Celt Gary Mackay-Steven which set him up for a tap-in.

Scott McKenna had missed a stick-on opportunity to equalise earlier with a diving header that went inches past.

All of the Celtic players did okay with the exception being Jack Hendry who continues to look way out of his depth when faced with any opposition remotely resembling quality.

For McLeish, the 4-4-2 formation with an actual left back playing in position worked better and with the recalls of Forrest and Armstrong there was a lot more vibrancy to the team but the same old errors continue to be punished. Rather like Celtic in Europe Scotland look completely incapable of keeping the back door shut for 90 mins.

Anyway, Big Eck staggers onto the doubleheader with Albania and Israel next month after this sorry weekend brought his record to two wins and six losses. Willie Miller remained optimistic that his friend could pull it off in the Sportscene studios last night obviously completely oblivious to what has occurred so far under his former central defensive partner.

Post-match analysis: Red Bull Salzburg 3 – 1 Celtic – The same old story!

Sometimes it’s great to be proved right.

This isn’t one of those times.

As predicted Celtic were pretty emphatically swept aside by Red Bull Salzburg in the Red Bull Arena last night.

Like most, I had approached the game with little to no belief that we could get something due to a combination of our opponent’s red-hot form and our own indifferent performances thus far this season. That plus the fact our record away in Europe is generally God awful.

So I was pretty shocked when after about 90 seconds Odsonne Edouard got the better of Andre Romalho and then finished expertly after a hopeful ball over the top from McGregor.

Image result for red bull salzburg celtic
French Eddy wheels away.

Thereafter we actually played the game pretty well with a good defensive shape and looked pretty tasty at times on the break.

We reduced Salzburg to some speculative shots from distance and right before half-time we looked to have increased our lead after another stampeding run at their goal from Edouard ended up with the same player scoring again after Salzburg keeper Alexander Walke saved well from a James Forrest effort but alas French Eddy had strayed offside.

Then came the second half and well…………….as the title alluded to we completely capitulated.

Salzburg went through the gears and we got deeper and deeper with Craig Gordon saving well from Dabbur and you hoped we had weathered the storm but then bang on 55 mins the same man was left standing alone in the box and with Jack Hendry marking thin air five yeards away he received a cutback from Hannes Wolf and swept it home for the equaliser.

From then on out there was only one team in it and wave after wave of attack resulted in a second Salzburg goal as Japanese internationalist Minamino almost waked in with Boyata missing wildly with a sliding challenge and Hendry again taken to the cleaners.

An inevitable third came when Dabbur swept home a penalty after Forrest was adjudged to have taken down Andreas Ulmer with 18 mins to go. It looked harsh, to be honest, but what the hell Forrest was doing in that position in the first place is anyone’s guess and it very much was a winger’s tackle.

2390
Forrest sees red.

Substitute Junuzovicat smacked one off the post late on and Celtic provided little to nothing going forward in the whole of the second half so it was a relief to hear the final whistle. 

Performance wise Leigh Griffiths was an empty jersey all night, Ntcham was absolutely wretched, Lustig continues to add weight o the belief that he is a spent force and Hendry as previously stated is lost in a Celtic jersey.

We desperately need Benkovic back in defence and sorely missed both Rogic and Brown, the latter especially in the second half as the team looked absolutely rudderless.

Yes, we didn’t expect a win or even a draw and yes Salzburg now remain undefeated at home since November 2016 in all competitions – which included rattling Lazio 4-1 in the quarter-finals of this very competition last season – so on the face of it, there is no disgrace.

But they were nowhere near the level of the Champions League teams we’ve faced in recent years ie: Barca, PSG, Bayern Munich etc yet in the second half we folded against them in almost identical fashion.

Brendan’s record in European football at the club is pretty poor, to say the least.

It currently stands at 14 wins from 36 matches for a 39% win percentage with 14 losses and 8 draws. In those 36 matches we’ve conceded 55 goals and scored 54 but it’s away from home where it really comes eye-watering.

You see on the road that was our 18th away tie under Brendan last night of which we’ve won four with five draws and nine defeats scoring 18 and conceding a pretty remarkable 36 so an average of two a game.

Too often we looked disjointed, confused and hopeless at the back and it’s been going on for three seasons now with no end in sight.

Our next two Europa League games are a doubleheader against RB Leipzig with the first game two weeks next Thursday so three weeks to try and get the likes of Benkovic, Rogic and Brown back and try and find some form as well as an actually feasible gameplan for playing away in Europe.

This really is turning into one long hard season.

Europa League Preview: Celtic vs Rosenborg.

I don’t know about you but I’m struggling to contain my excitement about tonight’s game with Norwegian Champions Rosenborg.

Image result for rosenborg 2018

It’s always nice to experience something a little different on the European front.

And could anything be more different and exotic than Rosenborg…..from Trondheim……..who we’ve already played four times over the past 13 months?

We could have been running out in the Amsterdam Arena last night as part of the Champions League instead but this is much better.

Though sarcasm aside I am actually pretty happy that we’re in the Europa League this year. Yes, there is a cash benefit to the Champions League group stages that dwarfs anything on offer in the Europa League but outside of that we are literally bringing a blunt knife to a gunfight every year and I take no satisfaction is seeing us slaughtered by near cricket scorelines by the likes of PSG and Barcelona.

Rosenborg themselves are actually going through a bit of a purple patch at the moment.

They have gone 11 games unbeaten since losing to us 3-1 at Celtic Park back on July 25th at Celtic Park.

Six of these have been in the league and five in Europe including one against us – the 0-0 game on their patch – with the other four in Europea league qualifying. It’s also included nine wins from the eleven games with five wins and a draw domestically and four out four in the qualifiers.

They swatted aside Irish Champions Cork City 5-0 on aggregate and then dispatched Macedonian title holders Shkëndija 5-1 over the two legs. So pretty plain sailing there.

In the league, they are currently top of the pile with a two-point advantage over Brann after playing 22 games thus far. If they do retain their domestic crown this year it will be their fourth on the spin. Safe to say they are back to being the all-conquering domestic powerhouse of Norwegian football after a relatively lean patch from 2005 to 2014 where they only won three titles. Previous to that they had claimed 13 in a row.

They are coached by, on an interim basis, for now, Dutchman Rini Coolen. He took over on the eve of our last home game against them after his predecessor KĂĄre Ingebrigtsen, to whom he’d been an assistant, was pretty surprisingly sacked. Ingebrigtsen had led the Rosenborg revival since his appointment in 2014 winning the aforementioned trio of back to back league titles and capturing seven domestic trophies in total. Though in fairness Rosneborg’s pretty imperious form since then would indicate it has been the right call, albeit harsh.

Image result for Rini Coolen rosenborg
Interim boss Rini.

None of Rosenborg’s strikers’ are particularly prolific – indeed none of them are anywhere near the top goalscorers charts in the league so far – but there’s no doubt their star man is Danish internationalist and former Arsenal marksman Nicklas Bendtner. He has 109 career club goals with 30 of them coming in 72 games for his current employers. He was particularly profligate last year with 23 in 43 appearances, however, this season he’s only hit the net 9 times in 23 games. Three of those strikes have come in Europe.

Talk of Bendtner though in regards to tonight’s game could be academic as the word is he’s likely to miss the game through injury.

It should be a tough game what with the run they are on but considering we ran over the top of them the last time they came to Celtic Park with a 3-1 win that was going on 6-1 and now have more games and sharpness in our legs there really is no excuses. As he did in the last home encounter against them French Eddy really must shine and begin to justify his huge club record transfer fee which was just confirmed in the clubs latest accounts.

Image result for edouard vs rosenborg
More of this tonight, please.

We’ve not been particularly great this season and indeed since we spanked Rosenborg have had a pretty patchy record from 11 games with only five wins, four draws and two defeats across all competitions. There’s no point in analysing our from though. We’re all acutely aware of it.

A win tonight is vital if we are to retain any genuine hopes of advancement to the last 32. For a start, it’s at home and secondly, it’s against opposition we know we can beat.

Last word on Rosenborg their last match was in the last this past Sunday. They won 3-2 away at Vålerenga who are coached by the one and only Ronny Deila.

Ronny was unlucky. Wasn’t he always?!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zviC0upgXDs