Scottish Daily Mail

CELTIC ARE OUT FOR THE COUNT

Lennon’s men floored by Staggies again in a Highland horror show

- JOHN McGARRY at the Global Energy Stadium

WHEN they come to ink the story of Celtic’s dismal season, the name of Ross County will be writ large.

Not content with loosening the Parkhead club’s strangleho­ld on the domestic honours by winning the Betfred Cup clash in Glasgow in November, this repeat triumph ended the soon-to-be deposed champions’ recent mini-renaissanc­e at a stroke.

While the outcome of this one match was never truly going to have any bearing on the destinatio­n of the title, it does significan­tly increase the chances of Steven Gerrard’s men getting over the line at Celtic Park on March 21.

In this most lamentable of campaigns, there are those who feel there is almost a sense of inevitabil­ity about that.

Celtic got precisely what they deserved here. Disjointed and error-prone throughout, there was scant evidence of the upsurge in form that had seen them win five games on the spin.

They created more than enough chances to get the job done but their final ball and finishing were nothing short of woeful. The loss of another goal from a set-piece was like the rerun of an old movie.

It was a night straight from the dark days of October and November — and brings all of the issues of that period back into sharp focus.

The blunt truth is that performanc­es like these have been the unwritten rule of Celtic’s season — not the exception.

And if there were some mitigating circumstan­ces for those travails earlier in the campaign, there were absolutely none here. This was a side without an excuse, but the display they collective­ly turned in was precisely that.

Amid it all, Ross County’s heroics should not and will not be lost. Jordan White thumped home a header with 19 minutes remaining to clinch the win, but he was one of so many heroes in blue.

The upshot of County’s endeavours is three points which lift them to tenth place in the table. They will now back themselves to go higher.

While they rode their luck at times, defensivel­y they were magnificen­t. By the time the last heroic block was made, you had to remind yourself that they’d conceded 15 goals in seven matches coming into this — and 53 over the season to date. This felt like a turning point.

With a more settled back four, Neil Lennon had seen his side claim three clean sheets in their previous five games but they were denied that element of continuity just eight minutes in when Greg Taylor pulled up with a muscle injury. Diego Laxalt, the lesser-spotted Uruguayan, was sprung from the bench.

Given how positively County had started, Celtic could have done without that setback. Stephen Kelly had already picked Scott Brown’s pocket 30 yards out, with Tony Andreu forcing Scott Bain into a comfortabl­e early save.

On a bumpy, muddy surface, Celtic struggled to get into an early rhythm. John Hughes’ ploy of packing the midfield and defending deep when called upon gave little encouragem­ent to the visitors.

Just as the County manager was beginning to like what he was seeing, Ryan Christie took advantage of Alex Iacovitti dozing and made for goal. His cross invited someone in green and white to gamble. No one did and County breathed a sigh of relief.

County were more than making a game of it. Blair Spittal worked Bain again with a stinging drive after the home side had thrown bodies forward.

Then, from Charlie Lakin’s deep corner, Jason Naismith rose at the back post, sent the ball back where it had come from and found Andreu. The Frenchman headed over from eight yards.

Another unwarrante­d error, this time Ross Laidlaw’s miskick, threatened to undo all of County’s good work to that point.

Odsonne Edouard gathered on the left side of the box and thought about shooting but saw David Turnbull in a better position. Only a sliding block by Iacovitti denied the midfielder the opener.

Lennon was becoming increasing­ly frustrated on the touchline. Christie had already sent one shot into the stand when he missed a simple chance to convert Edouard’s cross from close range.

Hughes was forced to replace Callum Morris with Keith Watson after the skipper succumbed to an impact injury, but there was no question he was still the happier manager at the break.

Christie did better when he connected with Jonjoe Kenny’s cross just after the interval but not sufficient­ly to work Laidlaw with his header.

An uncharacte­ristic Turnbull slip allowed County to again advance in numbers. Bain calmly plucked Spittal’s curling effort from the night sky.

A sweeping move involving Callum McGregor, Edouard and Laxalt then ended with the full-back firing narrowly over. It was becoming the story of Celtic’s night.

Christie continued the theme after fine work by Stephen Welsh to set him up. As a tame left foot shot ran past the post, Lennon looked to the heavens.

At times, County were just as profligate. Another energetic counter-attack gave Spittal ample opportunit­y to work Bain. Laxalt stayed on his feet long enough and the chance was gone.

The Uruguayan came onto a decent game. His smart ball round the corner gave Christie another opportunit­y. This time Laidlaw was called into action and beat away his angled strike.

Sensing another two points were drifting away, Lennon threw on Leigh Griffiths for Tom Rogic.

Hughes responded with a triple change involving Regan CharlesCoo­k, Ross Draper and Jordan Tillson but, before either man had had a touch, their side were a goal to the good.

Kenny’s foul on Paton gave County a chance to load the box. The midfielder took charge of the situation with a percentage delivery into the six-yard box.

With the ball in the air, Celtic’s rearguard seemed to turn to stone. At set-pieces, it’s too often the case. White muscled in and thumped a header in off the upright. The scoreline was no travesty.

Celtic’s response saw a Turnbull shot deflected wide for a corner and Griffiths fire into Laidlaw’s arms. Mohamed Elyounouss­i replaced Christie but not before the forward had ruined nimble footwork in the penalty box with another off-target effort.

Elyounouss­i did manage to call Laidlaw into action with a late header but County were not to be denied another famous win.

The Staggies’ season has just got going. For Celtic, the sooner this all ends the better.

ROSS COUNTY: (4-5-1): Laidlaw 8; Naismith 7, Morris 4 (Watson 42), Iacovitti 7, Tremarco 7; Gardyne 7 (Draper 69), Kelly 7 (CharlesCoo­k 69), Lakin 8, Andreu 7 (Tillson 69), Spittal 7 (Paton 60); White 8. Subs not used: Hilton, Shaw, Mckay, Hylton. Booked: Paton. CELTIC: (4-2-3-1): Bain 6; Kenny 75, Welsh 5, Ajer 6, Taylor 3 (Laxalt 8); Brown 5, McGregor 5; Christie 4 (Elyounouss­i 83), Rogic 5 (Griffiths 67), Turnbull 5; Edouard 4. Subs not used: Hazard, Ajeti, Klimala, Soro, Henderson, Ralston. Booked: None. Man of the match: Jordan White. Referee: David Munro.

 ??  ?? Downed in Dingwall: White beats the Celtic defence with his header and (inset) Edouard, Griffiths and Brown hold an inquest after the goal
Downed in Dingwall: White beats the Celtic defence with his header and (inset) Edouard, Griffiths and Brown hold an inquest after the goal
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