The Scotsman

No room for error in Latvia as Celtic fans start to get restless

● Winning domestic run lost on supporters

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C e l t i c’s p l aye r s a n d mana g e ment may continuall­y lament the absence of supporters at games. They really ought to be relieved over this consequenc­e of the global pandemic, though.

There is no question that in certain areas Celtic have functional­ity more than are functionin­g smo othly. A t wo -goal haul from Livingston at Parkhead for only the second time in the West Lothian club’s histor y was demonstrat­ion of that on Saturday. Even if the opener was a penalty and the strike to cause a nervy end for the home side was a once -in-a- career mighty biff from Julien Sennaro.

In between these 16th-minute and 79th-minute counters, Celtic scored three exquisite goals, but their fanbase are exhibiting such collective neurosis that they do not want to see any of the good from their team, or – more pointedly – their manager Neil Lennon, pictured inset.

Instead of a side that have a slight advantage in this tenin-a-row opp or tunit y of a c h a m p i o n s h i p c a m p a i g n as the result of R angers’ 2-2 draw away to Hibernian yesterday, they paint a picture of a team in turmoil.

Lennon is castigated for attempting to fine-tune a 3-5-2 formation so many of these followers appeared to be crying out for him to play only a month ago. He is damned too for daring to spread the workload during a busy period in making certain p ersonnel changes from game to game – a period wherein the Scottish champions just happen to have been the only team in the country able to string together five league wins.

Celtic supporters have had it to o go o d for to o long and don’t seem to recognise that every successful team has had its bumpy p e r i o d s . L e n n o n d e s e r ve s m o r e respect for the outcomes achieved under him in the past year and a half – winning all four trophies contested and guiding the club to its first pole position in a European group stage – but the reactionar­y nature of fandom in the Celtic domain denies him that.

As a result, his team simply daren’t s l i p u p i n t h e i r E u r o p a L e a g u e

“We all want to play European football and show our ability on that stage to the rest of the world. We just have to be at our best” JEREMIE FRIMPONG

third qualifying round tie away to Rig a in Latvia on Thursday. The wounds caused by the hapless defeat by Ferencvaro­s in the Champions League second qualifying round aren’ t going to heal easily. Lennon cannot afford more such bloodletti­ng. Not when Celtic have earned European group stage football for the past nine seasons. “It’ s a big thing for the club ,” acknowledg­ed the club’s effervesce­nt right wing-back Jeremie Frimpong, who says he doesn’t mind whether he is deployed in a 3-5-2 or 4-2-3-1. “We all want to play European football and show our ability on that stage to the rest of the world. It will be tough in Latvia but every game in the qualifiers is like that. Teams all want to beat us. They want to show their own quality and they will treat it like a final. We just have to be at our best and look to get the job done over there.” Frimpong has been one of Celtic’s success stories over the past 12 months, the 19-year-old feeling settled a year on from his breakthrou­gh. The 2019 summer signing from the Manchester City academy – a smart pick-up from Lennon–concurs the squad he joined then has been improved up on since. Principall­y with the additions of Albian Ajeti and Shane Duffy. The teenager pointed to the bench on Saturday as evidence of Celtic’s strength. Yet the fact that Odsonne Edouard sat on it alongside such as James Forrest, Mohamed Elyounouss­i, David Turnbull and Tom Rogic suggested trouble could be afoot with the 22-year-old French striker so crucial to Celtic.

Lennon may have been keen to promote a nothing-to-see-here attitude to Edouard having asked not to be selected as the result of feeling tired.

However, that cannot be considered the actions of a player willing to give his absolute all for the cause. Espe - ci ally a player so long placed on the shopping lists of all manner of powerhouse clubs before the window closes in just under a fortnight. Edouard may have missed three games with at high strain before the recent internatio­nal break, but during that pause for cross-border skirmishin­g he managed to play twice for the French under-21s before looking a little out of sort sin two games for Celtic since.

With inevitable doubts now cast on Edouard’s short-term future, Celtic supporters ought to celebrate that Lennon did so much to convince Ajeti to set up home at Celtic. The £4.5m signing from West Ham showed once again at the weekend that he is a magnificen­t finisher with one classy touch to snare him a fourth goal in five league outings. “He is so cool in front of goal,” said Frimpong. “He shows total composure. But that’s a top striker for you. He never panics.”

Ajeti might just want to share his secret with the Celtic support.

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 ??  ?? 0 Clockwise from main, Ryan Christie roars with delight after putting Celtic 2-1 in front; Callum Mcgregor blasts home the equaliser with a long-range effort; Jeremie Frimpong skips past Jason Holt of Livingston; Albian Ajeti stretches the hosts’ lead at the start of the second half. Inset left, Julien Serrano scored the visitors’ second goal.
0 Clockwise from main, Ryan Christie roars with delight after putting Celtic 2-1 in front; Callum Mcgregor blasts home the equaliser with a long-range effort; Jeremie Frimpong skips past Jason Holt of Livingston; Albian Ajeti stretches the hosts’ lead at the start of the second half. Inset left, Julien Serrano scored the visitors’ second goal.
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