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Personal

Fullname: Neil Francis Lennon
aka: Neil Lennon, Lenny
Born: 25 June 1971
Birthplace: Lurgan (N Ireland)
Height: 5.09
Signed (player): 8 Dec 2000
Left (player): 12 June 2007
Position: Midfielder (Holding, Defensive)
Debut: Dundee 1 - 2 Celtic, SPL, 10th December 2000
Squad No.:18
Internationals: N Ireland
International Caps: 39 caps
International Goals: 2 goals
Manager: Mar 2010 - June 2010 (caretaker); 9 June 2010 - Present (Manager)

Summary

Neil Lennon - Kerrydale StreetBorn on the 25th June 1971, in Lurgan

Martin O'Neill signed Lennon from his former club Leicester City in December of 2000 for £5.75M [Daily Telegraph] after initially missing out in securing his signature in August.

Lennon becomes Celtic captain in 2005.

Lennon signed a 1 year extension to his deal in 2006.

Lennon scored 2 goals in 39 appearance for Northern Ireland

Lennon announces to depart at end of season [BBC]

Lennon leaves Celtic and signs for Nottingham Forest, 12 June 2007 [BBC]

On 3 April 2008 Celtic announced that Neil Lennon would be joining the coaching staff to work with Gordon Strachan.

Following a 4 - 0 defeat to St Mirren the shambolic reign of Tony Mowbray ends on 25th March 2010 and Lennon is appointed caretaker manager [STV].

On 9th June 2010 Lennon is appointed Celtic manager [BBC].

BiogO'Neill, Martin - Pic

When Lennon arrived at Celtic to sign on, he never was to believe what he was to be in store for him. It was to be his being from that point onwards. His funnily bleach blond hair made him look a little comical and masked the true fighter underneath it all.

Signed by Martin O'Neill as a holding midfielder, his presence on the pitch was meant to bolster the defensive aspect of the team and cover for the more attack minded players and do the unglamourous defensive roles in the middle of the park. As it happened, this was all turned on its head, and he himself needed the club and fans to cover for himself off the pitch. There have been far fewer players in our club's history who have been as victimised as Neil Lennon by others, and his struggle to just be able to live his life has been a difficult one.

The strange thing is that much of this write-up will be about anything apart from what was on the pitch! Surprising, as there is a hell of a lot to say for what happened on the pitch as off it. He was a talented midfielder, but having taken on a more defensive holding role in the side (reflected in that he only scored three goals for us in seven years) he was one for the more avid fan to be able to understand and appreciate than anyone else. Football is a team game and not just about the goalscorers, and every great side needs players like Lennon who do the graft work that gives the space for the others to score the goals.

Arriving in Dec 2000, Celtic had already got off well from the starting blocks with Celtic manager Martin O'Neill (who was also his former manager at Leicester), and Lennon was brought in to build on the early success the team at that point was enjoying. Slotting into the Celtic side, he gave the attacking players a bit more comfort that he was behind them to assist, and effectively allowed us to be more daring in attack than if he wasn't there. Many people who only watch matches on TV don't understand the work that is done on the pitch by some players off the ball, and there were few players who worked as hard Neil Lennon off the ball. Some Celtic fans could find him frustrating as he was not averse to playing the ball back to the defence but in the course of a 90min game this is intelligent play, and you can't just attack at all times (possession is key).

His time at Celtic was marked with success, and two league titles in his first two years was excellent but the Road to Seville season (2002-2003) was one of the greatest highlights. As with others, he was well overshadowed by Larsson, Sutton and the goal scorers, but he never complained and got on with his job. Needling players to defend from the midfield, compete for the ball and cover for the others, he more than showed his value, and it was sad to see players like himself being on the losing side in the UEFA Cup when they deserved so much more. Having played throughout the bulk of Martin O'Neill's tenure at Celtic, his place will be assured as a player with the other more lauded players during that golden period.

As a reflection of his importance to the team and the club, he was made captain of the side in 2005, a well-earned accolade.

He did state that if we had achieved going through the group stages in the Champions League then that would count for more than the UEFA Cup Final (something the Huns liked to bring up when they achieved the feat first), and in 2006 his face was fully of joy as the interviewer informed him that we had qualified to the knock-out stages after defeating Man U 1-0. There are few other players for whom you could have felt as happy for.

As happens too often, Lennon stayed a season longer than he probably should have at Celtic. His pace was slowing down making him less effectual in his position, and in turn he became too easy a target for the moaners (they need a target to keep them occupied). Nevertheless, he captained the side to the league title for the second year in a row and he never gave less than his all.

At his last game for the club (as a player) he gave a farewell thank you speech. However, the traveling Aberdeen fans were giving him lip throughout his speech, and so he politely requested for the "sheep shaggers" to be quiet for a minute. All in jest, and in fairness the Aberdeen fans didn't take the hump! Controversial to the end our Lenny!!! (and we love him for it). Extra sadness on his departure at seeing another link from the "Road to Seville" on his way.


Controversy - whilst as a playerO'Neill shows his support fro Lennon

So what exactly was the issue with Lennon for many people out-with of Celtic? The simple answer is that he was a Roman Catholic Irish man who studied at St.Micheal's Grammar school, was raised in Northern Ireland, and then chose to sign for Celtic. Myths, lies and propaganda then were fabricated about him by the Huns and other in-bred fans from other Scottish clubs to supposedly justify (sic!) their barracking of him. Whole spates of non-incidents followed him as most people seemed to form delusions to try to convince themselves that Lennon was a bigot (not that he ever did or say anything bigoted to supposedly demonstrate that he was).

Notable was his departure from the N Ireland squad. He had to endure abuse at Windsor Park for having signed for Celtic - death threats were made against him and his family by Loyalist terrorists - and it led to his decision to have to prematurely end his international career. On choosing a political football XI, Simon Kuper (a respected international football journalist) chose Neil Lennon to be represented in the side due to the Northern Ireland incidents. Bigots had beaten him in in Ulster, but they weren't to defeat him in Scotland, yet they still made his life difficult and it was a challenge.

Bigoted abuse was relentless against Lennon, clearly showing that there were still many in Scotland who were stuck in the cesspits of the 17th Century. One episode happened at the end of a game against Rangers, where Neil Lennon went up to the Rangers fans and made a mock sign of smoking a cigar (you can take from what you want). What did they claim? They claimed that he spat at them (!) and that he made sectarian remarks. A set of Huns even got out a lip reader to try and "prove" this (they couldn't) and how someone was supposed to hear and witness him supposedly from so far away is not possible, and it just shows the low levels the Huns were willing to go to try to blacken Lennon's name. It was all a bizarre fantasy in their heads and it was all just a disgrace.

The whole bigotry against Lennon matter came to a head in November 2004, when after a torrid time in another game against Rangers, Martin O'Neill defiantly took Lennon back onto the pitch, and he went to the Celtic support to show his support and backing after Lennon had endured an afternoon of "racial and sectarian abuse". Papers wrote full write-ups on the events, and Graham Speirs (a respected journalist) later noted in a book he wrote that this shook David Murray (Hun's chairman) to act more decisively on the issue in fear of UEFA repercussions. The way that Martin O'Neill handled it was brave and deserving of respect, and both he and Neil Lennon had become reluctant heroes in this respect.

In all honesty, Neil Lennon was no angel. In one incident at the end of a match, he even ended up in a spat with fellow team mate Aiden McGeady! It was more handbags at ten paces but was a ridiculous spectacle. The problem was that he was just an over emotional guy. In a frank admission, he admitted later to having had serious problems with depression, but he has had the strength to speak about it publicly and hopefully other footballers can learn from his experiences. In any case, even when Lennon did go awry it was never offensive let alone sectarian.

In years to come Lennon's time at Celtic will be seen as an important point in the whole divide issue. Celtic have always been an open club - though not denying a handful of events that have gone against our ethos over the years - and Neil Lennon's treatment by other Scottish clubs' fans really showed that the country have many who are deaf, dumb or blind to reality, and this was notable even amongst various pockets of people who weren't just Rangers fans. Lennon stuck through it all and we stuck by him. That more than anything else is a real measure of success of Lennon's time as a player at Celtic.

We wish that it would have been possible to have just been able to talk about his performances on the pitch. However, when the next player comes from a similar background to Lennon's and he does not have to go through what Neil Lennon went through, then it will be time to happily reflect on the real victory for the Celtic ethos and on Lennon's part in this change.

However, matters were to get even worse when he became our manager with the bigots going into overdrive, with the press heavily pandering to them. Absolute disgrace.


Celtic Coach & ManagerLennon, Neil - Pic

In 2008, following Tommy Burn's stepping down due to illness, Neil Lennon was appointed to the Coaching Staff (under Gordon Strachan), and very welcome he was too. It was a successful move as we won the league in incredible nail-biting style, but the next season was a disaster and Gordon Strachan left at the end of it all.

In March 2010, he was appointed as the interim manager after Tony Mowbray was sacked after a long line of failings on the pitch. It was a turnaround for Lennon. Despite being said to be a popular coach amongst the players, stories abounded on the forums of some poor treatment and sidelining by the Tony Mowbray & Peter Grant regime, which didn't go well with the general support. The whole story isn't fully known to be fair to Mowbray & Grant, but the stories helped to fuel Lennon's popularity with the aggrieved support.

Anyhow, now in charge temporarily the question is how he was to handle the transition. A brave start with some good wins turned things, only to see it crash as we were knocked out by lowly Ross County in the Scottish Cup. It was embarrassing, and the players had let Lennon down. The result wasn't his fault, and the damage from previous regime was beginning to destroy things. He let the players clearly know his feelings:
“See projects? Forget it. I’m sick of hearing it. I’m sick of hearing about two- and three-year plans. I don’t buy into it. It’s about now. You don’t have time as a Celtic or Rangers manager. Projects are something my daughter does at school. I’m a football man, only interested in results, performances and players. I don’t care about two years’ time. I might not bloody be here.”

On 9 June 2010, Neil Lennon was confirmed as the manager of Celtic. In truth, there wasn't a long list of candidates for the job. Scottish Football was at a low and the club could neither afford or entice a big name manager from England or the Continent to come on board. However, that is no slight on Lennon. A good spell in charge meant he was a fair choice, but in truth there was a large degree of scepticism taking in account his short experience in coaching and lack of prep for management.

2010-11
However, in his first full season in charge Lennon would galvanise the support by producing an entertaining and winning team. The campaign took a while to get going and after early disappointments in Europe the team took a little while to gel. But his signings - particularly Izaguirre, Hooper, Ledley and Kayal - were on the whole superb acquisitions and by the start of the new year the Bhoys were in impressive form.

Ultimately though the season will forever be overshadowed by the shocking treatment of Lennon by some sick sections of Scottish society. Bullets, death threats, bombs and assaults would all ensure Lenny was never far from the front page.

Sadly, although there were a few examples of excellent reporting of the issues at hand, some in the media were far from innocent in this whole shameful saga. Ever eager to vilify Lennon, mostly for simply doing his job, some reporters added fuel to the fire. The Celtic manager was regularly and severely criticised for speaking out about referees, and reacting to provocation from the likes of Ally McCoist and El Hadj Diouf. Meanwhile other managers - such as Craig Brown - were all but ignored for behaviour far worse than that displayed by Neil Lennon.

On the pitch Celtic would fall short of claiming the title with Rangers taking another tainted championship. It was hard to take for a team who had played the best football in Scotland and which had frequently dominated the Ibrox side in encounters. But there was some consolation when the Bhoys claimed the Scottish Cup with a 3-0 win over Motherwell at Hampden.

[.... need to expand.....]

2011-12
Season 2010-11 saw Celtic make considerable progress under Neil Lennon and there is considerable confidence about the season ahead. That confidence was underlined on June 20th 2011 when Lenny was awarded a lucrative new 12 month rolling contract.

If you were to describe the 2011-12 season to anyone for Neil Lennon, then it would be best said that it was a season that no script-writer could necessarily beat. It was an emotional and topsy-turvy season that saw Lennon plumb the depths of despair to rise again and claim the SPL crown for the first time.

Unlike the previous season where Lennon was given the benefit of the doubt as he was a rookie manager and due to the off-field circumstances, there was less leeway this time. Against the Huns who had a rookie manager, we were favourites and many felt we were to cruise it. Things aren’t always as easy as that, and that’s what proved to be the case.

Domestically, after a fair but unconvincing start, we hit a rut which deepened over the coming months. The good form from last season was deserting the team, although injuries weren’t helping. The team were poor to watch and Lennon’s team was clearly not managing tactics well. The Huns despite being bereft of any talent, pulled ahead by an incredible 15pts by end-Nov (albeit playing two games in hand). It was an embarrassment and opinion on Lennon’s judgement and management were at rock bottom. There were few if any apologists, but most importantly the most patient were the board members who stuck by him even though most fans were of the opinion that it was all over for him.

One game stick out the most. First was the 3-3 match with Kilmarnock. The fans were heated over Lennon, and this match was a hoped for respite. Yet by half-time in an abject display we were amazingly 3-0 down! A fight-back led by Stokes and Mulgrew amazingly brought us within a hairs breadth of a victory but 3-3 was a fine and undeserved result. However, the support little celebrated the result, it being more two points dropped. Lennon admitted himself later that at half-time that he though it was all over. It didn’t appear to be an aberration either to many.

As for the press, the Daily Record had nailed it’s colours to the mast early on, and little difference from elsewhere. After wrongly disallowing a fair goal by Wilson in the opening match, they ran a back page story twisting Lennon’s words and making a mountain out of a molehill. The paper was in the wrong and portrayed him out to be a walking timebomb. It was out of order but an early reminder of the underhand agenda that many outwith of the club had against Lennon. An easy target for too many and the support’s backing was vital. There was little better from there on in.

Away from Scotland, in Europe, a disastrous early season saw Celtic out of Europe in the UEFA Cup qualifiers embarrassingly only to be re-instated by UEFA after FC Sion played ineligible players. Despite the reprieve it didn’t help Lennon’s reputation. The criticisms of his being tactically inept were gathering steam having lost against poor opposition.

Things were to change, not rapidly but they did. The league was believed to be over, and without the pressure the players played far better and began an incredible run of wins. At the same time the Huns began to slump and by the time of the match in the Dec game, our victory meant we’d leapfrogged them. Lennon was deserving of the praise having turned the side around! After all the criticism (much from even the Celtic support), he didn’t walk away or make excuses. He galvanised the players and we were now on top. We stayed that way from then on in to take the title.

Back in Europe, we didn’t qualify from our Europa League group. A poor start saw the team re-group and pull some great performances out the hat. It was a good learning curve for all. Lennon we hoped would have picked up a lot.

For Lennon, he was bringing through the players, they were all behind him. The performances were getting better and he was increasingly getting the hand of management. Problematically, he admitted that he didn’t bother with tactics. Naïve and daft comment and if true then it didn’t bode too well, and in the cups this showed, where we lost to Kilmarnock in a poor performance in the league cup final and then lost to Hearts in the Semi-final of the Scottish Cup. For a side that was coasting the league, it was baffling how we’d succumbed so poorly in the cups. We thought we’d win the treble, but Lennon was satisfied with the league at least. However it still brought out concerns over his managerial ability. Why were we still losing crunch games?

Lennon could take a lot from this season. It was also the collapse of Rangers on and off-field that will privately give Lennon the most satisfaction after the league title.

Must add that off-field, matter were as hard as ever. The Huns & Press continued to press Lennon as being some kind of villain. He wasn’t. He was no better or worse than others. It was deflection from the Huns’ predicament. Pathetic.

Additionally, Lennon had to manage after the unexpected death of a lawyer friend who had also been sent a potential exploseive device the previous season. The court case was difficult for Lennon but saw the defendants jailed for their actions. Lennon had to later sack friend and colleague Alan Thompson at the end of the season. A difficult move.

Moving forward, Lennon had to show mettle and tactical nous. His apprenticeship was over. Tactics brought us down previously and we wanted to be ahead on this balance for a change. He’d done well with transfers and we hoped this to continue. The young squad was maturing and needed a hand to take us to the next level.

It was a brave new world with the Huns gone now for Scottish Football. Question for us, how will Lennon adjust to the change with our main rivals gone?

2012-13

[JBC - ...i've got this written up, will post up soon....]



[.....]



Playing Career

Club From To_ Fee_ League Scottish/FA Cup League cup Other
Wycombe 31/01/2008 31/05/2008 Free 8 (1) 0 0 (0) 0 0 (0) 0 0 (0) 0
Nottm Forest 12/06/2007 31/01/2008 Free 15 (3) 0 1 (0) 0 2 (0) 0 0 (1) 0
Celtic 08/12/2000 12/06/2007 £5,750,000 212 (2) 3 26 (0) 0 10 (1) 0 52 (1) 0
Leicester 23/02/1996 08/12/2000 £ 750,000 169 (1) 6 8 (0) 0 23 (0) 3 8 (0) 0
Crewe 09/08/1990 22/02/1996 Free 142 (5) 15 16 (0) 1 8 (1) 1 15 (0) 1
Man City 26/08/1989 09/08/1990 Trainee 1 (0) 0 0 (0) 0 0 (0) 0 0 (0) 0
Totals £6,500,000 547 (12) 24 51 (0) 1 43 (2) 4 75 (2) 1

goals / game 0.04 0.01 0.08 0.01

Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals

Honours with Celtic as a player:

UEFA Cup Scottish Premier League: Scottish Cup: Scottish League Cup:

Managerial Career

Seasons PLAYED WON DREW LOST
2010 - Present
115 84 13 18

Honours with Celtic as a Manager:

Scottish Premier League: Scottish Cup: SPL Manager of the Year:

Quotes

"Henrik Larsson is obviously a wonderful talent, but the guy I really like in the game today is Neil Lennon. He works tirelessly, always passes it to somebody in the clear and gets back well."
Bobby Collins


“So we’ve got the away goal, just right on half time,” recalls Lennon. “It was such a huge boost for us. We were pretty happy with the way we played in the first 45 minutes. Martin asked for more of the same; just defend for your life and be brave on the ball when you can." As Liverpool pressed in vain for an equaliser, Celtic struggled to retain possession and were under the cosh until a frustrated verbal exchange between Lennon and striker John Hartson sparked the giant striker into life. “About half an hour into the second half, big John [Hartson]’s going through a wee dodgy period and gave the ball away a couple of times,” said Lennon. “So I said ‘hey, you, you hold that ball’. “Then he turned round to me and said ‘you shut up or I will rip your head off’. Something like that, words to that effect anyway. Two minutes later I played it into him and he shrugged off Hyppia, played a one two with Henrik [Larsson] and lashed one into the top corner. “That was the best moment for me in the whole tournament that goal. Just to see the big man wheel away to our fans and looking at our bench and you know that you are 3-1 up with 10 minutes to go and there is just no way back for Liverpool."
Neil Lennon on 2-0 win v Liverpool (2003)

“Getting through the group stages would be as big as reaching the UEFA Cup final because then you’re one of the best 16 teams in Europe. f you play in the UEFA Cup, you can’t really say that because you’re out of the Champions League.”
Neil Lennon (2004)

“I certainly didn’t need a lip-reader to work out what 30,000 were calling me.”
Neil Lennon after we played the Huns (the Huns had hired a lip-reader claiming he'd made sectarian remarks at them at the end of one match (complete balderdash)


“The Celtic captain has this amazing capacity to have baying mobs and berserk tabloid columnists sounding off barmily about him. It really is a remarkable gift.”
Graham Speirs (journalist for The Herald) on Neil Lennon (2005)


“The newspapers that have ganged together to pursue Lennon have treated [him] with contempt in its most literal and legal sense. There is an agenda at work. Selling more newspapers might be one justification, but there appears to be a darker motivation.”
Phil Gordon (journalist for The Times) on Neil Lennon(2005)


"At school, St Michael's, they only played Gaelic football. The nuns threatened to expel me because I was playing football on a Saturday rather than playing for the school Gaelic team! My dad had to go up and see the head nun and sort a few things out."
Neil Lennon battling to play the game even whilst a kid!


“See projects? Forget it. I’m sick of hearing it. I’m sick of hearing about two- and three-year plans. I don’t buy into it. It’s about now. You don’t have time as a Celtic or Rangers manager. Projects are something my daughter does at school. I’m a football man, only interested in results, performances and players. I don’t care about two years’ time. I might not bloody be here.”
Neil Lennon in as caretaker manager (April 2010)


"What I want to do is bring is the thunder back. I want this place rocking again. I want the passion, I want the noise. I want the fans to be able to walk to the ground ready for it. I want the players to go to war every time they go on the pitch. All those things will be in-built before the season starts. We’ve got to put up a really stronger challenge to Rangers and try to wrest the title away from them."
Neil Lennon in his first press conference as full manager (Jun 2010)


"Craig [Thomson] is meant to be one of the best officials in the country so it doesn't say much about the rest"
Neil Lennon Nov 2010


"So Lennon got his victory and I, like most Rangers fans, would be happy to see him get the job. He provides an excellent 'hate' figure and also it would mean he does not join Chesney (Gordon Strachan) at Middlesbrough."
Jeff Winter (2010, ex-EPL referee and media *****, self-confessed Hun who got caught out making some extreme anti-Catholic sick comments in 2011)

"So that's bullets, death-threats, daubs on street outside his home + two public assaults on him. Life is good for Neil Lennon in Glasgow."
Graham Spiers
(journalist for The Times)

"Don’t let what happened to me tonight take the shine off a wonderful team performance … I don’t walk alone."
Neil Lennon via Twitter (May 2011)


“Neil Lennon is now a classic Celtic icon. And he is no shrinking-violet, which really irks some people...”
Graham Spiers (The Times May 2011)


"They [Rangers] couldn't sign me because they had a non-catholic signing policy"
Neil Lennon (RTE interview, July 2011)

"If Rangers think they they're hard done by they should see some of the decisions that go against Celtic. We'd be here all day."
Neil Lennon (Dec 2011)

“The ironic thing is normally in the past when we come away from European games away from home we talk about how the team haven't done themselves justice and the fans always do,” said Lennon. Now we are talking about the opposite. The team covered themselves in glory last night and yet there is a rogue element who keep tarnishing the name of the club. My only surprise is that they got the spelling right. I am very disappointed, they have let me down, they have let the board, players and background staff down and 99.9% of the support down.”
Neil Lennon on the fans who held up a "**** UEFA" banner at Udinese v Celtic match (Dec 2011)


“I’m not big on tactics. It’s about the players and they have to go out onto the pitch and apply that.”
Neil Lennon with a curious admission (Dec 2011)

"No-one in Scottish football history has had to contend with this level of pressure while trying to do their job."
Peter Lawwell (Celtic Chief Exec) (Apr 2012)

"You dream about being a player, you dream about being a captain and you dream about being a manager, but now I'm living the dream!"
Neil Lennon on day he won his first League title as manager (7 Apr 2012)

"We want to create our own memories & our own legacy for the players here. We want them to be heroes."
Neil Lennon 18 Sep 2012 (just prior to the Champions League group stages)

"If you gave me £12m I couldn't guarantee finding someone with a winning mentality like Neil Lennon's."
Gordon Strachan (2012)

"What people are seeing now is the real Neil Lennon, a man who is highly intelligent, articulate and gifted."
Peter Lawell (Celtic Chief Exec) on Neill Lennon after 2-1 win over Barcelona (Nov 2012)

Twitter: "Keevins and Traynor badmouthing you in Daily Record today, not making any secret of their anti-Lennon/Celtic."
Lennon reply: "They are both an irrelevance to the game now. They will always get a platform to air their hogwash. I ignore it you should too..."
Neil Lennon on Twitter (Nov 2012)

"I was quite surprised with how good he is. The way he speaks to people and everything about him, his knowledge. He's just a pleasure to work with. Neil is a leader. He always was. He's a moaning t***, let's put it that way, but that's what makes him a winner. You can see that he can go all the way. He's got that in him."
Garry Parker, Celtic first team coach and former Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest midfielder. (Jan 2013)

"We probably have to take it as a back-handed compliment because they’re looking up at us. I am not going to answer any more questions on Rangers because they are not on our radar."
Neil Lennon's retort to Rangers owner Charles Green (Jan 2013)

"Neil had a special aura when he was captain of Celtic. I always thought he would be manager of Celtic".
Nakamura on former team-mate Lennon (2013)

Articles (as a player)

Articles (as manager)

Books

KStreet

Pictures





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