The Irish Mail on Sunday

By any measure, there is no way back for Lennon

- By Gary Keown

WHEN little anyone says makes sense any longer, you know it is time up. When the messages become an insult to the intelligen­ce, something has to change. Neil Lennon is finished as Celtic manager. He was finished, really, the moment Ferencvaro­s dumped him out of the Champions League at the qualifying stage for the second time in two seasons back in August.

Of course, the Celtic board, a naturally conservati­ve bunch, may keep plodding on with the Lurgan man because they fear changing personnel would bring too much upheaval with 10-in-a-row on the line. They may suspect Rangers still have it in them to wet the bed again and go to pieces.

However, it is pretty clear what should come next. After all, if the directors stick with the status quo, just keeping their fingers crossed and hoping for the best against all evidence, it surely confirms their time at the club is up too.

Major shareholde­r Dermot Desmond said earlier this season that he believed the current squad would beat the Martin O’Neill team that went to the final of the UEFA Cup in 2003.

It is just one of many absurd utterances from the club’s powerbase that have left the saner element of the Celtic fanbase questionin­g the reality of their own existence.

‘Every year since I have had somewhat of an influence within the club, the ambition is to improve in every metric, full stop,’ added Desmond.

Well, your multi-millionpou­nd squad with its exorbitant wage bill has just been taken apart 4-1 at home by Sparta Prague’s reserves in UEFA’s consolatio­n cup.

That’s just two months after being bounced out of the Champions League qualifiers by some mob from Hungary and a few weeks after failing to get a shot on target against Rangers at home.

What other metrics do you need to tell you that you are going nowhere other than backwards? At speed. No matter how much cash keeps getting thrown at the project. The fall-out from Thursday night’s nadir at home to Sparta has offered nothing to cling on to. What does Lennon mean by insisting there needs to be a ‘culture change’? He has been the manager for nearly two years.

He surely put the culture that exists in place and has allowed it to develop in this way.

In any case, wasn’t he insisting up until Thursday night that everything behind doors was hunky-dory?

He also stated aftermatch that he didn’t know where the performanc­e against Sparta came from. Has he not been watching s i nce t he start of the campaign? Whatever

Lennon may think, this is not rooted in any wish to be disrespect­ful. It is nothing personal whatsoever. He is, by and large, a good man to deal with. He has achieved great things as a player and manager.

It is just not working out. And there is too much at stake.

Lennon lit a torch under the building after Ferencvaro­s when stating that players had been trying to get out of the club for six months and would be dealt with.

He didn’t deal with them, though. Further millions were spent on guys who now don’t play.

Turning on the media, blaming them for noise about his future, was the kind of deflection tactic only the desperate consider.

As for being upset about Ireland defender Shane Duffy being called ‘rank rotten’ by Kris Commons in a newspaper? Commons was being kind.

This is Scottish football. And Celtic. And when you are underperfo­rming as badly as this when you are being paid so well, it becomes a rough, knockabout arena.

It’s what Desmond wants to do that really matters.

He had a shot at going big with Brendan Rodgers and it ended sourly with, no matter the recent revisions of history, European success still a pipedream.

Will he want to have a go at bringing in an elite coach again after the economic chaos of Covid-19? Is there some other strategy aimed at building a club with better scouting, recruitmen­t and youth developmen­t and a way of turning handsome revenue into something bigger than just a yearly joust with the local rivals for a low-grade domestic title?

‘Europe is so important as a yardstick of our football progressio­n,’ insisted Desmond in a rare interview with The Athletic in September.

You know exactly where you are after Thursday’s shambles then, Dermot.

It’s time to show whether that was just more in the way of hollow platitudes or whether you really mean what you said.

Because if you are willing to let this continuing decline go on any longer, with Celtic fulfilling the role of absolute nobodies outside of Scotland, it is clear you need to sell up and ship out, too.

 ??  ?? CLOCK IS TICKING: Neil Lennon is under pressure at Celtic
CLOCK IS TICKING: Neil Lennon is under pressure at Celtic
 ??  ?? AMBITION: Dermot Desmond
AMBITION: Dermot Desmond

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