The Scotsman

‘No excuse’ for limp display says Frimpong

- By ANDREW SMITH

There seems no end to the damage done to Celtic by their Dubai trip.

The limpness betrayed by a depleted Parkhead side in labouring to a scoreless draw against Livingston on Saturday seemed as if it might at least represent some sort of a full stop on the floggings, on-field failings, and febrile atmosphere that have scorched the club as a consequenc­e.

Yet, it wasn’t. Rangers scratching a draw at Motherwell the following day made the brainless United Arab Emirates excursion appear all the more egregious.

Whatever the myriad shortcomin­gs of Neil Lennon’s team, there is every reason to suspect that if they had their full complement for the home encounters with Hibs and Livingston, they would have taken full points, not two. In that event, they would now have been two points closer to Steven Gerrard’s men following their Fir Park draw. The fact is, though, Celtic are not. They are 21 points adrift of their rivals, with three games in hand, and the jig is up for them in pursuit of a record 10th title.

And for Jeremie Frimpong, it is no use blaming the absence of Lennon, his assistant John Kennedy, and 13 players - notably their full array of senior attacking options in Odsonne Edouard, Leigh Griffiths, Ryan Christie, Mohamed Elyounouss­i, Albian Ajeti and Patryk Klimala - for their insipid display against David Martindale’s high-flying side. A team Celtic will face again on Wednesday at the Tony

Macaroni Arena in a contest that will put to the test how much key personnel have been missed this past week. All will be back in place having completed their 10-day isolation period required through being identified as close contacts of Christophe­r Jullien following his Covid-19 positive test on the return from Dubai.

“Although there were a lot of players missing, there were enough regulars out there. That’s no excuse,” said the Dutchman, one of eight club regulars who could still be fielded by stand-in team leadergavi­nstrachan, pictured. “The team that’s picked has to go out and perform. But we just didn’t do that. I felt confident before the game that we’d produce the performanc­e that would get us the result we needed but it didn’t work out like that. I can’t explain why. It’s been strange the past few days without the manager and John Kennedy being around as you work so closely with them. There is no point in complainin­g. We’ve just got to deal with it.” The principal issue was, unsurprisi­ngly, the lack of any frontline momentum, midfielder Tom Rogic pressed into action as an emergency striker.

The static Australian wasn’t somuchafis­houtofwate­rasa fish that appeared as if he was in the middle of the Sahara.

Frimpong wasn’t for seeing Saturday as the final meaningful act in an excruciati­ng Premiershi­p campaign, though. "All we can do is try

to keep winning. We’ll see,” he said.

“We don’t look at the league table. We just take one game at a time and see where it takes us.”

 ??  ?? 0 Celtic right-back Jeremie Frimpong is closed down as he tries to find a way through against Livingston during Saturday’s goalless stalemate at Parkhead
0 Celtic right-back Jeremie Frimpong is closed down as he tries to find a way through against Livingston during Saturday’s goalless stalemate at Parkhead
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