The Scotsman

A YEAR OF EXTREMES FOR LENNON’S MEN

Andrew Smith looks back on Celtic's 2020; from title glory to fans’ protests and clinching a quadruple treble

- By ANDREW SMITH

Sometimes the best appraisals are the product of self reflection.

At Celtic’ sA GM theo ther week, club chairman Ian Bankier described 2020 as a year of “extreme highs and extreme lows”. Ain’t that so. Whatever happens in the second half of the 2020-21 season -and even the typically pollyan nish former Celtic strike rJohnH arts on admitted it would take a “minor miracle” for Neil Lennon’s men to overturn a 16-point deficit and so land the obsessed-over 10-ina-row – the club will always have their quadruple treble.

In the passage of time, the full extraordin­ary nature of this feat will be appreciate­d. It has become almost glib to talk of the four consecutiv­e domestic clean sweeps as something that will never be seen again. To attempt to give the astonishin­g run its proper context, it is even a stretch to see any Scottish club getting within halfway of the achievemen­t. Consider that until Brendan Rodgers swept in at Celtic in 2017, and embarked up on a glorious period that torched the record books, no club in more than 70 years had even strung together back-to-back trebles.

The quadruple treble is, then, a success for all ages. The pity of it is that the six-month delay in bagging it - thanks to the bonkers penalty shootout victory over Heart sin the Scottish Cup final last week - made it instantly feel like a relic of bygone, better times. The time-warp decider necessitat­ed by the global lockdown in March, as the world was turned upside down by the Covid-19 pandemic, plonked the accomplish­ment into a period where the almost supernatur­al powers Celtic had displayed bringing it to life had effectivel­y evaporated.

It is impossible to discuss the club’s 2020 without reference to the deadly virus. It appears to have cost Celtic so much for reasons not always eas - ily discernibl­e. Neil Lennon’s team pre-covid and in the age of covid bear only a passing resemblanc­e. When the season was halted in mid-march, never to return - much to the chagrin of so many - with Celtic subsequent­ly called champions following that vote that sealed a record-equalling ninth straight title - the Parkhead side were unstoppabl­e. Striding towards the title by a whopping margin in holding a 13-point advantage over a buckling Rangers, nothing would have stood in their way of racking up the quadruple treble in the semi-final and final of the Scottish Cup then still pending.

A quadruple treble, by the way, that would appear to remain unparallel­ed in world football, despite what Lincoln Red Imps have cheekily suggested recently. The Maltese team’s assertion they claimed a quintet treble between 2003 and 2008 isn’t wrong. But it isn’t the treble against which Celtic’ sf eats are being compared, since it doesn’ t comprise a top-flight championsh­ip and two national cup competitio­ns. Red Imps’ third string trophy, the Pepe Reyes Cup, is a one - off ‘sup er cup’ game between the winners of the league and cup, the equivalent of England’s Community Shield… which no team down south has ever incorporat­ed to claim a treble.

Celtic are sensitive to such downplayin­g of their remarkable run, even to suggestion­s the sheen has been taken off it through the club currently en during their most uncertain period in a decade. Yet, that is what has ensued since the return of a covid-compliant form of football in August. Since that time Celtic have seemed bedevilled, and it feels as if they and their Ibrox rivals have undergone some sort of body swap; Steven Gerrard’s men becoming the unstoppabl­e force in the league as their ancient adversarie­s spectacu

larly lost their way.

On and off the pitch. More than any shambolic defending that has stalked Celtic this season, and left the support unhinged about the underminin­g of then on- negotiable capture of the neurosis-inducing 10, the most unedifying spectacles associated with the club were the violent protests from ‘neddish’ fans outside the stadium demanding the ousting of Lennon and the Celtic board. They came during a ruinous form run of only two wins in 12 games. A sequence that brought Europa League humiliatio­n, the halting of the record run of cup - tie successes at 35 games in a home League Cup encounter against Ross County, and faltering league form that handed a humongous title advantage to Rangers.

The Celtic board deserves a certain admiration for standing by Lennon when the pressure to jettison him as his team imploded across October and November - with the first fivegame home run without a win

since 1957 and the first run of five -games without a victor y in all competitio­ns for 23 years -appeared to have become impossible to resist.

With the recent renaissanc­e that has brought four straight victories - and, of course, the banking of the quadruple treble - they will consider their tolerance has been justified. The fact is, though, short of Lennon guiding Celtic to wins in ever y one of their 16 Pre - miership encounters to come - including the daunting test at Ibrox on January 2- they are unlikely to enjoy the happy ending they so desperate - ly desire for the Irishman and their 10 quest.

Yet, it is difficult to know where to apportion blame for that, beyond blaming the fates. Losing two league games to Boli Bolingoli’s Covid-breaching unauthoris­ed overnight trip to Spain, which put them on the back foot in the title campaign from the opening weeks, seemed to set a tone. At various points, they have lost the services of no fewer than five players because of Covi d-related issues arising from internatio­nal trips.

In addition, the decision to hold on to all their main players in the summer despite such as Odsonne Edouard, Kristoffer Aje rand Olivier Ntcham patently desiring moves, has appeared to backfire. Similarly with an unpreceden­ted outlay on new players; arrivals such as Vasilis Bark as, Shane Duffy and Albian Ajeti becoming prob - lems rather than solutions to them.

But they’ll always have the quadruple treble.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 0 Celtic captain Scott Brown lifts the 2019/2020 Scottish Cup after the dramatic penalty shootout win over Hearts at Hampden which sealed the quadruple treble.
0 Celtic captain Scott Brown lifts the 2019/2020 Scottish Cup after the dramatic penalty shootout win over Hearts at Hampden which sealed the quadruple treble.
 ??  ?? 0 Celtic fans protest outside Parkhead before a match against Kilmarnock earlier this month.
0 Celtic fans protest outside Parkhead before a match against Kilmarnock earlier this month.
 ??  ?? 0 Alex Iacovitti celebrates making it 2-0 for Ross County
0 Alex Iacovitti celebrates making it 2-0 for Ross County
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 0 Jens Petter Hauge makes it 3-1 for Milan at Parkhead
0 Jens Petter Hauge makes it 3-1 for Milan at Parkhead

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom