1998-07-22: Celtic 0-0 St Patrick’s Athletic, Champions League Qualifying 1st Rd

Match Pictures | Matches: 19981999 | 1998-1999 Pictures


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Trivia

  • European Cup Preliminary tie, first leg,
    Celtic's first EuropeanCup game for ten years.
  • In an interview to a Slovakian newspaper Dr Jo admitted that he had been fourth choice for the position of Head Coach after Gerard Houllier, Egil Olsen and Tommy Svensson. Jock Brown stuck to the party line that Houllier had not been made a formal offer.
  • Celtic had yet to bring in one new player. Rangers had splashed £20 million on 6 players. This, along with Jock Brown’s ability to if not lie then be ‘economic with the verité’, was really getting to many Celtic fans.
  • Craig Burley sported his bleached white barnet.

Review

A newly completed stadium and the first European Cup involvement for 10 years was hardly graced by this performance.

Jock Brown given the silent treatment and the team boo-ed off the park.

St Pat’s team applauded at the start, when they came on with flower posies to throw to the crowd, and also off the pitch at the end. Brattbakk replaced at half time.

About as bad and confidence-deflating a start to a season as you could get.

Teams

Celtic: Gould; Boyd, Mahe, McNamara (Donnelly 67), Rieper (Annoni 83), Stubbs , Larsson, Burley, Lambert, Blinker, Brattbakk (Jackson 45).
Subs not used: McKinlay, MacKay, Kerr, McBride.

St Patrick's: Wood, Clarke, Campbell, Lynch, Hawkins, Osam, Gormley, Russell, Molloy (Reilly 72), Braithwaite (Croly, 86), Gilzean.
Subs not used: Byrne, Devereux, Long, Morgan, McKenna.

Bookings: Lynch, Wood (St. Pat's)

Referee: B Benedik (Slovakia).

Attendance: 56,864

Full Game

Highlights

Articles

  • Match Report

St Patrick's day as sorry Celtic booed off by fans
The Scotsman 23/07/1998

Celtic 0 St Patrick's 0
CELTIC last night provided their fans with the sort of start to the season they most definitely did not want. July has yet to run its course, and already Celtic are managing to find new ways to underachieve even when everything appears to be pitched in their favour.
Last night they managed only a goalless draw against a side who, judging by interviews in newspapers, had been treating their brush with fame as merely something to tell their grandchildren about. It might be something their grandchildren will be telling their own grandchildren about, should St Patrick's triumph after the second leg of this European Cup preliminary tie next week in Dublin. On last night's showing, this is far from an impossibility.
Celtic will always be an unfathomable lot. Last night they had 56,000 fans noisily backing them in their recently completed, state-of-the-art stadium. They even had a new coach to try and impress.
It is safe to say they did not do that. They left the field to a chorus of booing from those fans who had at least decided to stay the full course. The general manager, Jock Brown, it was plainly clear to see, does not hold the franchise on being the object of Celtic fans' displeasure. The performance of the players last night saw to that.
The last time most of these Celtic players were spied was at the world's most prestigious football tournament. Last night they were appearing in European football's greatest competition and, from the start they made, they showed every sign of a team suffering from travel sickness.
St Patrick's began in determined fashion and within a minute had cut a swathe through the Celtic defence, Trevor Molloy twisting and turning before firing in a shot that ought to have troubled Jonathan Gould more than it did.
Celtic momentarily showed signs of a side befitting so grand a home. A fine move involving Regi Blinker, Henrik Larsson and Harald Brattbakk ended with the latter's shot being saved by Trevor Wood.
St Patrick's first clear-cut chance arrived when the former Dundee striker Ian Gilzean stooped low to send a header from a corner into the side netting.
On one of the last occasions he played here, six years ago for Dundee, the towering forward was sent off after a set-to with Peter Grant. This time he bounded out on to the pitch at the start clutching a bunch of flowers, as did all the St Patrick's players, and then hurled them into the crowd. Any rancour that remained was instantly forgotten. Indeed, last night seemed altogether too friendly. The atmosphere was never likely to encourage a truly rousing game of football to break out.
Celtic geed up their fans with a rally midway through the first half. A Craig Burley chip was touched over the bar by Wood, while Blinker, for all his troubles last season, seemed intent on making a point. Certainly, he provided a couple of telling crosses, but they remained unspoken for. Larsson had a header well saved, but St Patrick's held firm, thanks mainly to keeper Wood. Five minutes before half time he saved brilliantly from a Burley header, and then bravely blocked Larsson's effort after the Swede had pounced on the rebound.
By the start of the second half the rain was teeming down, but the game was resolutely refusing to burst into life. The downpour certainly did not revitalise Brattbakk, who had been replaced at half-time by Darren Jackson.
You hardly know what to say about the Norwegian. He looks to have skill in bundles, but there is something terribly lacking in his game. If it is his confidence, it can hardly have been improved by being hauled off in front of the huge crowd after a mere 45 minutes' work. And, mark you, his teammates were not any more impressive.
Only news of Rangers' first-half toils in Liverpool were keeping the Celtic fans from showing more concern at their own side's failings. Alan Stubbs came closest to opening the scoring for the home side in the second half, heading narrowly wide after picking up a lofted Paul Lambert free kick. Shortly afterwards, a Burley shot whistled over the bar.
Jackie McNamara was taken off in favour of Simon Donnelly as Celtic strove to turn possession into goals, a move not well received by the crowd.
St Patrick's, for their part, were defending with great fortitude. For sure, they might have been stringing players from one side of the pitch to the other, but it was, of course, effective and Patrick Dolan's team did not look like they were ready to give anything away.
Indeed, the best chance of the half fell to the away side. With five minutes remaining Paul Osam released substitute Martin Reilly. Parkhead fell silent, but the striker shot narrowly wide, prompting a mass barrage of booing from the Celtic fans.

  • Manager Interview

Pictures

Dr Jo Venglos, post Match
"There have been better results, but then you have games like that. We have to now prepare ourselves for a different game next week.
"I am just sorry for our fans who gave us nice support. I am sure the players will do their best to make up for this."
"Getting behind the defence was a problem.
"In the first 25 minutes their goalkeeper made six or seven great saves, and we should have scored at least one. But I have not changed my opinion about my players. I have total confidence in them."

Patrick Dolan, St Patrick’s Athletic manager
"I am not getting carried away because next week will be a very different type of game. We are realistic enough to know it is a different situation when you play at home, and playing against players who are technically superior. At home you have to leave yourself vulnerable.
"I am just pleased about the way we played. We will never forget the night we came to Celtic Park and got a draw. In ten years time the Irish will still be talking about this result."

Stats

Celtic St Pat's
Bookings 0 2
Fouls 7 10
Shots on Target 10 2
Corners 13 1
Offside 3 1