Neil Lennon admits Celtic ‘mentally sank’ and flags major summer rebuild

Neil Lennon cut a refreshingly honest figure at Hampden on Saturday – admitting his Dunfermline side were overwhelmed by the occasion and flagging a significant summer overhaul to come at East End Park…

There was something almost poetic about the whole afternoon. Neil Lennon – Celtic captain, Celtic manager, Celtic legend – standing in the opposite dugout at Hampden as Martin O’Neill’s side lifted the Scottish Cup with a 3-1 victory on 23 May. The man who helped O’Neill win this very trophy in 2001, who later won it himself as Celtic boss, now on the receiving end of his former mentor’s thoroughness. A full-circle moment, and an unforgiving one.

Speaking via Sky Sports, Lennon didn’t hide behind excuses. His side had been spooked by Celtic’s intensity from the first whistle, and he knew it:

“They mentally sank. Celtic’s quality showed and we couldn’t handle the occasion the way we needed to.”

Neil Lennon at a press conference for Celtic football club.

That’s a brutal admission – and a telling one. Lennon had urged his players at half-time to be braver, to keep the ball, to back themselves. They couldn’t do it. And when you consider that this Dunfermline side pulled off a remarkable semi-final win over Premiership top-six side Falkirk on penalties just to reach Hampden, the scale of the step up against O’Neill’s Celtic becomes clear.

When Celtic Chanted His Name

There was another moment that caught the eye – the Celtic support singing Lennon’s name during the match. Asked about it afterwards, he offered one of the lines of the day: the fans “weren’t singing it five years ago.” Pointed. Wry. And absolutely accurate. The manner of his exit from Celtic Park in 2021 left wounds on both sides, and Lennon hasn’t forgotten – nor should he.

But there was warmth in it too. The reception he got from the green-and-white half of Hampden spoke to what he means to this club’s history, regardless of how that last spell ended. Martin O’Neill himself has spoken about just how incredible Lennon’s record at Celtic was – and that legacy doesn’t disappear because of a difficult final chapter.

The Summer Rebuild Ahead

Lennon was frank about what comes next for the Pars. A “major rebuild” is coming at Dunfermline this summer – several out-of-contract players expected to depart, new signings needed if they’re to mount a more credible challenge next season. It’s the honest reckoning of a manager who knows exactly what the gap looks like up close.

Over on the Celtic side, O’Neill has already flagged his own significant squad overhaul plans for the summer – so both clubs face busy windows, albeit from very different positions. Questions about O’Neill’s long-term future also continue to linger in the background, with national outlets keeping a close eye on how Celtic’s succession planning develops.

Martin O'Neill celebrating with a raised fist while managing Celtic.

For now though, Celtic have the Scottish Cup. Martin O’Neill has silverware. And Neil Lennon – honest as ever – goes back to work.

Enjoy it, Bhoys. Every last drop of it.

Just an Ordinary Bhoy

About Author

Fraser Munro

Fraser Munro has been watching Celtic from the terraces and stands since he was old enough to understand what the roar of a crowd meant. Growing up in Stirling, football was woven into the fabric of daily life, and Celtic were always at the centre of it. His interest in the club goes well beyond the ninety minutes, extending deep into the history, identity, and community that make Celtic something more than just a football club. Fraser writes with the kind of detail and affection that only comes from genuine connection to the subject. He is drawn to the stories that sit just beneath the surface, the forgotten players, the turning point matches, and the moments that shaped the club's character across generations. He believes that understanding where Celtic have come from is essential to appreciating where they are going. When he is not writing, Fraser can usually be found debating formation choices with anyone willing to listen, digging through old match programmes, or following the club home and away whenever the schedule allows. He brings a grounded, supporter-first perspective to everything he covers.

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