Return of Celtic’s hamstring curse as Starfelt latest Bhoy to suffer

With hamstring injuries very much being en vogue for anyone wearing adidas’ green and white hooped collection this season, if there were any post-match concerns to come out of Celtic players involvement in the Nation League games last night it would have been short odds on the cause being a hamstring pull.

Slovenias Zan Celar (C) vies for the ball with Swedens Carl Starfelt (R) during the UEFA Nations League – League B Group B4 football match between Slovenia and Sweden at the Stozice stadium in Ljubljana, on June 2, 2022. (Photo by Jure Makovec / AFP) (Photo by JURE MAKOVEC/AFP via Getty Images)

The unlucky victim this time around is of course Carl Starfelt, who departed the action just prior to half-time of Sweden’s 2-0 win over Bosnia last night. It certainly didn’t look good that the player had to leave the field on a stretcher, but we can all but hope that was a precautionary measure rather than any indication of the severity of the injury.

Starfelt would understandably be frustrated as with only six caps for his national team he’d have been hoping to transfer his consistent club form this season onto the international stage and make an impression.

Sadly it wasn’t to be the case and speaking to Expressen seems to be hoping for the best but aware his chances of playing any further games for the national side this summer are likely to be slim.

“It is of course not fun, especially not when you get the chance to play and then it is clear that you want to take it. But sometimes it’s like that in football, I have to see now what kind of injury it is then I have to take it for that reason.

“We’ll see, it does not look very bright. If you are lucky, the X-ray may not show anything and I can recover in a few days, but right now I do not see it as very likely.”

Whilst the injury is a blow for Starfelt’s international hopes, the fact it has occurred at the beginning of June should hopefully mean – depending on the severity of the injury – that Starfelt could be fit for pre-season training for Celtic in a months’ time.

And fingers crossed that is the case because the centre of defence is an area Celtic are somewhat short on numbers.

Cameron-Carter Vickers has yet to put pen to paper on a permanent deal, Christopher Jullien has appeared to have burned his bridges with his frustrations at a lack of gametime made public in the press, and Nir Bitton – someone who made a habit of starting every season playing in central defence for Celtic – has now left the club. Meanwhile last season’s early breakthrough kid Dane Murray is also out injured with a long-term injury, leaving Stephen Welsh and Starfelt as the only two defenders in Ange Postecoglou’s circle of trust.

Had this injury been picked up during the course of the league campaign it could have had disastrous consequences for Celtic, that it’s during the summer recess gives us all hope that Starfelt could make a full recovery in time for pre-season training, or at least close to it.

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The timing also gives Celtic scope to use the transfer window to bolster options in that position, something that sounds likely with Celtic already linked with the likes of Manchester City’s Taylor-Harwood Bellis and Japanese international Ko Itakura.

In the meantime, Christopher Jullien may well see an opportunity at a redemption story here. After all, one player’s injury concerns are always another’s opportunity – and Jullien will know just that more than most.

It appeared Jullien had very much started burning bridges at Celtic at the tail end of last season, now might be an opportune moment to start dousing those flames.

Niall J

About Author

As a Bellshill Bhoy I was taken to my first Celtic game in the summer of 1987. It was Billy McNeill’s return to Celtic Park as manager and Celtic lost 5-1 to Arsenal . I thought I was a jinx, I think my Grandfather might have thought the same. It was the finest gift anyone ever gave me when he walked me through Parkhead's gates.

1 Comment

  1. Its for exactly this reason we ‘need quality first team ready’ strength in depth for every position at the club.

    We sign too many young ‘future prospects’ who more often than not don’t live up to their promise, and leave ourselves threadbare in the first team ready department! …think we’ve got our priorities crossed here!

    I’m all for signing youth prospects, but only the very best, the select few; any coach/scout worth their salt should be able to identify who and who not to bring into the club.

    We’re maybe best concentrating our efforts on certain age groups, like those mature enough to realistically throw their hat in the ring for a first team place(Liel Abada, Osaze Urhoghide(?)) outwith truelly phenomenal younger players…its less of a risk that way too, and more rewarding.