The Scotsman

Brentford close to £13.5m deal for Ajer

- ANDREW SMITH,

Kristoffer Ajer is close to sealing a move away from Celtic after the Parkhead club agreed a transfer fee with Brentford, according to reports.

The English Premier League newboys had an offer of £12 million plus an additional £3m in add-ons for the centre-back rejected last weekend.

Press reports in England now claim the Bees have returned with an improved offer – thought to be £13.5m with additional payments – which has been accepted by Celtic.

The Norwegian internatio­nal has stated his desire to leave Celtic Park this summer following five successful years at the club he joined from Start in 2016.

Ajer is already in the final year of his contract and would be able to walk away for free next summer. The 23-year-old is keen to move this summer having previously been frustrated by Celtic demanding £20m for the player.

Meanwhile, Rangers are understood to have offered £3.85m for Heerenveen midfielder Joey Veerman.

The Ibrox side have been linked with the 22-yearold throughout most of the summer and are now said to have made an official offer to the Eredivisie outfit. The bid is thought to be short of the £5m offer submitted by Verona.

There is a need to rethink the importance of the Champions League to the nascent Celtic career of Ange Postecoglo­u. A rethink in danger of passing some media commentato­rs by.

It was stated by one in recent days that the Greek-australian would struggle to shake off the false start that would result should his first competitiv­e test with the Parkhead side engender an inglorious outcome.

Yet, this does a disservice to the realism being expressed within the club’s on-line community; a constituen­cy not ordinarily noted for patience and understand­ing. It also fails to recognise a lesson from history.

The home opening leg of Celtic’s second qualifying round Champions League tie against FC Midtjyllan­d, in rolling around this Tuesday, has come hideously early for Postecoglo­u.

His first emblematic signing - £3.4 million Israeli winger Liel Abada - is just in the door. Meanwhile, there is a host of selection issues to be faced down by the 55-year-old beyond how quickly he can integrate the teenager.

Injuries could deprive him of a number of establishe­d performers, most notably Odsonne Edouard. And, ahead of Preston’s visit to Glasgow’s east end on Saturday, he has only had three friendlies against modest opposition to attempt to knit together a team. A task made all the more problemati­c through working with a squad light on senior personnel in a number of key areas owing to the departures of a clutch of loanees after a ruinous season.

All of which hardly bodes well for the encounters with the runners-up from the Danish league who, unlike Celtic, progressed to the Champions League last season. A campaign wherein they claimed creditable draws with Liverpool and Atalanta.

So bleak does the picture seem for a Celtic side that were 25 points adrift of title winners Rangers in May, though, that there is a willingnes­s to strain any blame for Postecoglo­u if Celtic crash and burn Champions League this season. At least ahead of the touch paper being lit at 7.45pm on Tuesday...

That is as it should be, of course. Judgments ought to be reserved on what the 55-yearold is capable of achieving with Celtic until he can select a team he has constructe­d and coached to a point where it carries his obvious imprimatur.

He hardly has an inexhausti­ble supply of time to arrive at that, but it doesn’t evaporate whatever happens in the two legs against FC Midtjyllan­d.

In part, that is because even with the scant evidence obtained through the matches down south against Sheffield Wednesday, Charlton and Bristol City - there have been signs of Celtic exhibiting the identity he will demand of them. They have displayed an aggression and intensity in their front-foot attacking intent and ball-winning that has belied how few hours he has had to mould them on the training pitch.

Indeed, it is a credit to him that, merely with a raft of pimply youths and a handful of mainstays, he has given rise to the possibilit­y that we may all have been guilty of over-playing how denuded is the pool with which he has been forced to operate.

As a rule, the players he deployed down south appeared engaged, and not only in tune of what was being asked of them, but capable of delivering on that. It isn’t just youngsters such as new arrival Liam Shaw, and academy products Karomoko Dembele, Adam Montgomery and Owen Moffat

that have shown up well. No-one is claiming that Greg Taylor or Anthony Ralston are the solutions to Celtic’s recent full-back deficienci­es longterm. However, the pair have looked as if they could be serviceabl­e options short-term.

Martin O’neill was able to transform the club’s fortunes two decades ago, when Celtic last found themselves so humiliated by Rangers, not just with fresh blood. He laid the groundwork for a dramatic turnaround by initially squeezing turns out of such as Bobby Petta, Jonathan Gould and Oliver Tebily. It is what smart coaches – such as Postecoglo­u – do.

It still seems eminently likely he could struggle to graft together the disparate body parts of the current squad to fashion success over FC Midtjyllan­d over the next week-and-a-half.

However, there seems an understand­ing from the Celtic support that, in the event of such a Champions League exit, a black mark would not be placed against Postecoglo­u that would prove indelible. It could be no other way when Celtic managers have never been judged solely on Champions League qualifying campaigns - just as well, with the club coming up short in five of their past nine such sorties.

Gordon Strachan was able to enjoy enormous success across four years at the Celtic helm from 2005 and 2009. He did so with three titles and two Champions League last 16 appearance­s. All of which followed his tenure at Celtic wherein he inherited a team that came within two minutes of landing the title the previous season - opening with him presiding over the club’s heaviest defeat in Europe. A 5-0 loss at Artmedia Bratislava in the second qualifying round of the Champions League.

Postecoglo­u, inset, won’t want to test whether he can exhibit the same bounceback­ability skills that Strachan showed subsequent to that. But, this year more than any other, there seems a general acceptance that a new Celtic manager cannot be defined by what happens to him in his opening week or so of competitiv­e continenta­l football.

 ??  ?? 0 Gordon Strachan, left, bounced back superbly from Celtic’s 5-0 defeat at Artmedia Bratislava back in July 2005
0 Gordon Strachan, left, bounced back superbly from Celtic’s 5-0 defeat at Artmedia Bratislava back in July 2005
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