Full Time: Celtic 1-4 Stuttgart

Celtic welcomed Stuttgart back to Paradise for the first time in more than two decades, when incredibly Martin O’Neill was in the dugout in his first stint at the club.

The match got off to a slow start when dozens of supporters clubs and groups threw balls onto the pitch in protest against the current hierarchy and various issues with the running of the club. After a long delay, action finally got underway properly and Celtic’s wide men looked sharp on both sides.

A period of abysmal play followed a poor corner kick delivery . There were a number of failed clearances and scrappy touches, which culminated in Schmeichel playing a dreadful ball out from the back and Stuttgart took advantage by reclaiming possession and a low shot beat the Celtic goalkeeper. He should have done better.

That goal game with barely 15 minutes on the clock and did little to improve the atmosphere in the stadium, which was almost solely provided by the away fans again.

On 18 minutes Cvancara made the most of a half chance and tested the goalkeeper – positive signs could have been in the offing after all. Within two minutes of that effort, Celtic drew level. This time it was the turn of the Stuttgart defence to gift a goal as sloppy play at the back handed Nygren a one on one opportunity and the Swede coolly rounded the keeper to slot home.

By the 28th minute, amateur hour returned as an ongoing inability to defend balls into the box was demonstrated by the Hoops. A deflected cross looped eight yards from the Celtic goal and the defence left the smallest man on the pitch totally unmarked, with a free header to put the Germans back in front. It was shocking defending, which had been the story of the goals to this point and indeed of both teams in the first third of the match.

Play for the remainder of the half was even with no further clear cut chances.

The whistle to commence play for the second half was a sound that Celtic needed to improve to have any chance of staying in this tie… if the players needed any more noise to that effect having just left the dressing room with Martin O’Neill delivering a team talk.

Araujo took heed of that message and drove down the right with a fine run and inviting cross, but nobody attacked it with any vigour. It was then up to the Mexican international to fashion another chance and win his team a corner, but nothing came from it. Nevertheless, the signs were that the Hoops were improving.

It was a false dawn. By the hour mark Celtic were almost 4-1 down. The third for Stuttgart was another mistake by Kasper, who seems to be struggling more with each passing game. The fourth was a delicate chip over the Dane. However, VAR intervened and ruled the goal offside. Despite the reprieve, some sections of the stands began to empty.

There were fleeting moments for Celtic in reply. Lots of endeavour but the necessary quality at key moments was lacking. A fluke goal almost came Celtic’s way five minutes from time when Sarrachi sliced a cross which sailed inches over the bar, with the unsuspecting goalkeeper nowhere to be seen. Meanwhile, at the other end another skewed cross almost resulted in a goal when a header from close range went the wrong side of the post.

In injury time, Stuttgart did get their fourth goal. Once more the defence was wide open and the away side took full advantage.

The full time whistle sounded to compound Celtic’s misery – an embarrassing 4-1 defeat at home against a reasonable opponent but this is far from Champions League or elite level. To fall to such a hammering at home in the Europa League is humiliating for a side with such a history of glorious European nights in Paradise.

Introducing The Celtic Star App and our new ad-free Premium Service...

Go ad-free on The Celtic Star, get a FREE trial period to try it out. Also download our new App – available for both Apple and Android – and get the best Celtic content on your phone without fighting through pop-up ads and being forced to watch videos.

Our new PREMIUM service comes with a free seven-day trial so you can look before you book. If you are happy to continue the price will be just 99p per month or £9.99 for the year. For that you get an AD-FREE SITE plus access to our premium content, and you’ll also help us make The Celtic Star even better and less reliant on advertising revenues, allowing us to be more focused on publishing the best Celtic features on the internet.

Click HERE to access your FREE trial. We think you’ll like it! We’re Obsessed with Celtic and we think you are too! Join us hand in hand...

About Author

Hailing from an Irish background, I grew up on the English south coast with the good fortune to begin watching Celtic during the Martin O'Neill era. I have written four Celtic books since the age of 19: Our Stories & Our Songs: The Celtic Support, Take Me To Your Paradise: A History Of Celtic-Related Incidents & Events, Walfrid & The Bould Bhoys: Celtic's Founding Fathers, First Season & Early Stars, and The Holy Grounds of Glasgow Celtic: A Guide To Celtic Landmarks & Sites Of Interest. These were previously sold in Waterstones and official Celtic FC stores, and are now available on Amazon.

Welcome to our Live Comments section, where new comments will appear automatically

3 Comments

  1. I didn’t have any big expectations for tonight especially on recent form, but that was a hard watch.
    Hesitant at the back, disconnected in midfield and powerless up top.
    Sadly, another off night for the keeper as well. Too many of those now.
    They were simply quicker stronger and better all over the pitch, and whilst some of that may be down to us having been up against it in recent games, it’s not good for morale.
    Plaudits to Nygren for keeping this run going. Pity we couldn’t capitalise.

  2. Anthony Mcquade on

    We , Glasgow CELTIC are an embarrassment!
    Brought on by the , well documented , failure of our.board .
    Possibly “LIARS “IS THE TERM that should be used to describe these people as I understand they are now lying to MR O NEILL AS WELL