The Scotsman

Levein believes Lennon was ‘conceding’ title to Rangers during his Dubai tirade

-

Levein has suggested an “exasperate­d” Neil Lennon may have conceded the title to Rangers during his controvers­ial press conference on Monday.

While much of the focus has been on Lennon's Dubai tirade, where the under-fire Celtic boss lashed out at the media, pundits and government officials over the criticism the club has received following the trip, he also addressed his team’s slim hopes of overturnin­g a 21-point deficit to Rangers in the Premiershi­p title race.

Lennon admitted: "The league may be beyond us but we’ll not stop trying. What we have to do is start winning games on a consistent and regular basis." Those words led ex-hearts and Scotland boss Levein to question whether Lennon still believes his team can recover to win 10-in-a-row.

"For me he's conceding," Levein said. "The way things have gone this season – they've gone against him – and I'm sure in his mind he's thinking I cannot get a break here.

"Even the Dubai thing that has worked brilliantl­y in precraig vious seasons has become a huge problem."

Speaking on BBC Sportsound, Levein added: "For me, Neil's getting to the point where he's probably just about had enough. That's what it sounded like to me. He's firing bullets in every direction.

"I feel he's at the point where everything he does at the moment doesn't seem to work for him. That was the sound of someone who is exasperate­d."

Levein, who had a number of verbal jousts with Lennon while the pair were Edinburgh derby adversarie­s, admitted that he has sympathy for the former Hibs boss.

"I feel a bit sorry for Neil in some regards," he said. "I just think this season has been incredibly frustratin­g for him.

"Going right back to the beginning when [Boli] Bolingoli

disappeare­d to [Spain], that caused Celtic some problems, then their form on the field disappeare­d for a fairly lengthy period of time. He was just getting that back together.

"I think the trip to Dubai was a huge mistake. Somebody above Neil or somebody from the government should have said there's a potential for disaster here and they shouldn't be allowed to go.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom