The Herald - Herald Sport

Lennon faces backlash but recruitmen­t is miles behind

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A WEEK used to be regarded as a short, sharp shock in politics.

It has nothing on the football world.

Last Saturday night Neil Lennon was riding the crest of a wave after Celtic got off to the best start to a league campaign in 48 years. With a European tie tilted in Celtic’s favour and the Parkhead side scoring goals with abandon, those who had been frothing at the mouth when Lennon was given the job on a permanent basis after the Scottish Cup final in May had little to bump their gums about.

By Tuesday night they had shouted themselves hoarse, their rancour accentuate­d by an ‘I-toldyou-so’ lament.

But if trial by social media has Lennon in the dock, it has the board who appointed him tried and sentenced. Little underlines the fragility of anyone’s position at Celtic than a failure to clinch Champions League football.

The debate around both has been predictabl­e and knee-jerk but what is clear are a number of unpalatabl­e truths for Celtic; their defeat and the lack of Champions League finances for the second year in succession will have given Rangers, whose early start to the season has offered evidence of a team on the up, a monumental lift.

In the week in which the

Parkhead side banked £25million for the transfer of Kieran Tierney to Arsenal after a summer of protracted negotiatio­ns, they lost out on a bounty of at least £30m by their failure to take part in Europe’s premier competitio­n. If it comes to a league title that is a little close for comfort in January, Celtic’s ability to go out and bring in reinforcem­ents to kick them on has been compromise­d by what happened this week.

And not only that, but it has put Lennon under intense pressure before the season is up and running.

The first game against Rangers is at Ibrox next weekend with all the early portents of the season pointing to these fixtures determinin­g just who comes out on top.

Lennon will already know that he cannot afford a result or a performanc­e as meek and passive as the one which Celtic produced at Ibrox at the end of last season. Lennon has stayed in the same area of Glasgow since he moved to Celtic as a player in December 2000. He lives and moves within the city and always has done; he is neither deaf nor blind to the mood of the support and will be keenly aware that knives have been sharpened for him in certain quarters.

In the immediate aftermath of Tuesday night’s defeat Lennon acknowledg­ed that no Champions League football would affect his budget between now and the closure of the window, a statement that brought forth a fresh wave of outrage on social media.

Celtic have money in the bank. And despite popular mythology, they have spent plenty. As a PLC, their accounts are transparen­t. Legally they can be nothing else. So operating costs and a wage bill peaking at £60m last season would suggest that for all the fingerpoin­ting, accusation­s of a parsimonio­us board are inaccurate.

But when there is a £7m defender and a £3m left-back on the bench, it is fair to ask if the money has been spent wisely.

And, ultimately, the biggest lesson that Celtic have failed to heed as they have failed to secure Champions League football four times in their last six attempts, is that the January transfer window sets the foundation­s for what the club do in July and August.

It is too late at this stage of the season to be bedding in players for what are the biggest games of the season.

Last January the spine of Celtic’s business was done in loan deals; Timothy Weah. Oli Burke. Players who were never going to be hanging around for long given the finances involved. Vakoun Issouf Bayo has flitted in and out of the first team without looking like nailing down a regular place.

It is myopic to go into the summer still needing to bolster when the Champions League qualifiers define the tone for the season.

That Arsenal were seriously courting Tierney was not news. Not when their scouts had watched him so often. Mikael Lustig moving on was inevitable when the decision was made for just the one year he was being offered while Dedryck Boyata’s cards were put on the table this time 12 months ago. Filip Benkovic was always on the way back to Leicester. Major surgery was always going to be required on Celtic’s backline this summer.

The biggest issue was not the players who were looking at a future elsewhere but a head of recruitmen­t who was waiting it out.

Getting in a permanent and astute head of scouting and recruitmen­t is as important as any signing that Celtic will make this summer.

 ??  ?? Celtic manager Neil Lennon struggles to get his message across during the second-leg defeat to Cluj at Parkhead
Celtic manager Neil Lennon struggles to get his message across during the second-leg defeat to Cluj at Parkhead
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