The Scottish Mail on Sunday

CELTIC’S LATE SHOW LINE-UP

Star subs Furuhashi and Abada strike in the closing minutes to stun brave United

- By Graeme Croser AT CELTIC PARK

CELTIC’S capacity for late, gamechangi­ng goals is renowned — but there was still something dramatic about the way they reacted to the peril of dropping Premiershi­p points here.

The punishment meted out by Ange Postecoglo­u’s team on Dundee United was brutal as Celtic scored not once but twice at the death to send their supporters home breathless.

United had shown bravery to hang tough and create the chances that eventually yielded an 87th-minute equaliser through substitute Dylan Levitt.

On reflection, United head coach Liam Fox might wish his side had waited a little longer to claim their second goal of the afternoon.

As the United players celebrated Levitt’s goal heartily in front of the small but noisy away section in the corner, back at the halfway line Postecoglo­u was throwing on Daizen Maeda, his final substitute of the afternoon.

A buzzbomb of energy, the Japanese forward helped re-energise Celtic’s listing play and pile on the pressure that resulted in his compatriot Kyogo Furuhashi’s goal, just as the game drifted into stoppage-time.

A couple of minutes later, Liel Abada was skipping through on goal for the final act, a moment that was redolent of the Israeli’s late match-winning moment against the same opposition in January.

That win did much to encourage Celtic in last season’s title race — just a few nights later they thumped Rangers by three clear goals to flip momentum in their favour.

Now seven points clear of their Old Firm rivals with one more game played, Postecoglo­u’s team scarcely need the extra dose of belief but the psychologi­cal damage this latest turnaround might do on the opposition may be more telling.

That United were so competitiv­e is a credit to Fox, who was tasked with turning round a group of players who lost 9-0 to the same opposition at Tannadice in August.

Removed from the team a week earlier, goalkeeper Mark Birighitti had been spared the humiliatio­n of that thrashing but must have feared the worst as he conceded early in this one. Fresh from the personal career highlight of a goal in the Bernabeu, Celtic winger Jota was starting his first game in a month and began this match full of intent.

The Portuguese almost scored with an early first-time shot that caught Birighitti out and after that narrow miss he promptly carved out the opening goal.

Steven Fletcher has been a reliable hold-up man throughout his career but he was caught cold by Matt O’Riley, who fed Reo Hatate.

Jota could have felt perfectly entitled to go for another shot as he accepted the Japanese’s through ball but made the unselfish decision of clipping the ball across goal where Sead Haksabanov­ic squeezed his shot in at the back post with a little help from Ryan Edwards. It was the Montenegri­n’s first goal for Celtic.

United might have folded but Fletcher led the charge to the other end and claimed the leveller with the helping hand of VAR.

There weren’t too many appeals as the former Scotland man’s header deflected off Alexandro Bernabei and away from goal, yet the footage was placed under review by remote official Nick Walsh.

Invited to view it on the monitor, referee David Dickinson awarded the penalty and booked the Argentinia­n for his trouble. Fletcher did the rest from the spot.

There was another VAR interlude after Dickinson failed to award a Celtic free-kick for Craig Sibbald’s late challenge on Giorgos Giakoumaki­s. As Walsh flagged up a potential red-card offence, the fans were subjected to another delay.

Already nursing a grievance at the perceived injustice of the penalty, the crowd reacted angrily as play eventually restarted without censure.

The nuances of VAR, which does not have the power to award yellow cards, may take some time to sink in but the interlude felt like a horrible waste of time.

Amid all these distractio­ns, Ange Postecoglo­u’s message to his players has been firm and persistent. Keep going. Don’t make excuses. And so they kept plugging away until the keeper-assisted equaliser arrived.

This time Haksabanov­ic’s snap-shot was firm but Birighitti’s attempted save merely slowed the ball as it crept in off the post.

With a rigid back five and a compact midfield, this was a United team built to contain, and Celtic found it hard to kill off the game.

David Turnbull thought he’d scored from a Jota cross but, between them, Birighitti and Aziz Behich seemed to do just about enough to keep the ball out. The budget for VAR does not extend to goal-line technology, so we couldn’t be 100-per-cent sure.

Giakoumaki­s and Turnbull each came close before a steady drip of substituti­ons from Fox started to change the pattern of the match.

First and most importantl­y, the Tannadice coach removed his midfield anchor Arnaud Djoum and replaced him with Levitt, sacrificin­g steel for the Welshman’s greater ball-playing ability.

Suddenly United were keeping the ball better and then the arrival of Glen Middleton injected energy into the attack.

Postecoglo­u had played safe by removing Bernabei at the break, no doubt on account of the full-back being drawn into a couple of scrapes before half-time.

Greg Taylor was a dependable replacemen­t and was required to deny Middleton, who alighted on Levitt’s through ball and clipped a shot over Joe Hart that needed the urgent attention of the defender to clear off the line.

Ryan Edwards headed off the post from the resultant corner and as United’s confidence grew so the sense of jeopardy in Celtic’s play became tangible.

The United equaliser was unconventi­onal but again owed everything to Levitt’s persistent probing. The former Manchester United starlet delivered a teasing cross from wide, this time in the direction of the latest substitute arrival Tony Watt. He did enough to distract Hart and the ball drifted beyond the keeper into the net.

If the visitors’ enterprisi­ng play rendered the equaliser no surprise, was anyone shocked by the denouement? Celtic are not renowned for their set-piece prowess but, with the game in stoppage-time, a corner saw them pull back in front.

O’Riley swung the ball over, Tony Ralston flicked on and substitute Kyogo applied the finishing touch.

Hatate carved out the fourth, setting Abada off on the run that saw skip into the box and dink a lovely finish over Birighitti before embarking on a manic ‘taps-aff’ celebratio­n that brought a booking he’ll scarcely have registered.

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 ?? ?? HAPPY BHOYS: Furuhashi acclaims his late goal and (top, clockwise) Haksabanov­ic fires in his opener and (bottom) Giakoumaki­s watches the Montenegri­n net his second, while Abada celebrates scoring Celtic’s fourth
HAPPY BHOYS: Furuhashi acclaims his late goal and (top, clockwise) Haksabanov­ic fires in his opener and (bottom) Giakoumaki­s watches the Montenegri­n net his second, while Abada celebrates scoring Celtic’s fourth
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