Cummings, Daniel

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Full name: Daniel Cummings
aka: Daniel Cummings
Born: 14 April 2006
Birthplace:
Signed: 1 July 2022 (professional terms from Celtic youth teams)
Left: 29 May 2025 (£300k to West Ham, pre-contract, development fee)
Position: Forward, Centre-forward
Debut: Aston Villa 4-2 Celtic, Champions League, 29 January 2025
Squad No.: 55
Internationals: […]
International Caps: [TBC at end of career]
International Goals: [TBC at end of career]


Biog

“If you want to be patient and trust the club, you’ll get there. If you don’t, you might listen to your agent, who’s got a different agenda, that takes you away from here, and then you’ll go somewhere else. But there’ll always be chances here for young players. One, if they have the ability. Two, if they have a bit of patience.”
Rodgers (Feb 2025)

Daniel Cummings was a youth player who had made his name fast at Celtic with a notably stellar start to the 2024/25 season in the reserves, scoring a barrow load of goals. Soon he was called up to training with first team, quite an achievement as the senior side were a very formidable side at this moment (domestically and in Europe). The departure of fellow reserve Rocco Vata had provided an opening path to the first team squad, with many hopeful to finally see some success from the youth ranks after so may premature departures in recent years.

He was though behind the prolific Kyogo and the expensively purchased Idah. It meant patience was needed albeit that was a short commodity amongst the youth rank players in recent seasons.

Daniel Cummings in particular was on the radar of  agents raiding any talent possible to sign them up for a side down north. After the incredible return that Liverpool were expected to make on Ben Doak, there was an increased number out to plunder talent from Scotland without any care of their lib term prospects and development.

With Kyogo’s departure to Rennes in January 2025, it finally promoted him (briefly) to the second main striker spot providing him with his debut for the first team in the final Champion League group game, subbed on with around 15 mins left in a 4-2 defeat away to EPL side Aston Villa (Jan 2025). Celtic had already qualified as had Aston Villa, but Celtic still put in a good performance.

Despite that taste of first team action, over previous months to this match there were numerous reports that Cummings was about to sign up and move to numerous clubs down south (albeit most second tier clubs) and the reports continued even after the Villa match. In fairness, with daily reports of Celtic chasing this that striker to replace Kyogo (even on loan), it’s understandable that Cummings likely didn’t rate his chances at Celtic for further appearances.

He signed up with West Ham on a pre-contract in February 2025, and was never seen in the Celtic first team again, joining his new club in the summer.

Regardless of anything, we wish him the best.


Quotes

“There’s no update on that. I’d always say for the young players, I think the challenge here now for young players is patience. They want to be in the first team at 17, 18. But that’s difficult at a club like this here, unless you’re an incredibly special talent. But it doesn’t mean that you can never be. I’ve spent my career and my life developing young players, putting them in the team. And some have been ready. Like Raheem Sterling at 17 years of age. He was ready. Physically, mentally, ability, everything. Then there’s been some other players, like Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, that need a wee bit more time, and he gets his debut, and then he’s ready a bit later. It’s just about time. What young players need to have here is, is understand that there’s a bit of patience needed. And the captain of the club is a perfect example. Young players come through the system, had to take a loan away from here, and then at 21 he plays, and now tomorrow he’s playing his 500th game. There’s no greater example. But if you want to be patient and trust the club, you’ll get there. If you don’t, you might listen to your agent, who’s got a different agenda, that takes you away from here, and then you’ll go somewhere else. But there’ll always be chances here for young players. One, if they have the ability. Two, if they have a bit of patience.”
Rodgers (Feb 2025)

“Celtic have had games at Parkhead this season when they are 5-0 up at half-time but we haven’t seen any young players coming on. So again, if he is someone who doesn’t think he is going to get an opportunity then why not go somewhere else and see if you can make the grade. No one has seen him, that is the problem.”
Ex-Celt Andy Walker (Feb 2025)


Playing Career

APPEARANCES
(subs)
LEAGUE SCOTTISH CUP LEAGUE CUP EUROPE TOTAL
2024-25 0 0 0 (1) (1)
Goals 0 0 0 0 0

Honours with Celtic

(Honours are marked below in which the player has played in at least one of the matches in the campaign.)

None


Pictures


Articles

THE REAL REASON BEHIND YOUNG STARLET’S SUMMER DEPARTURE FROM CELTIC

https://www.acsom.net/post/celtic-s-shambolic-youth-development-an-exclusive-insight-into-a-pattern-of-incompetence

BY LIAM CARRIGAN March 2024

AN EXCLUSIVE INSIGHT INTO A PATTERN OF INCOMPETENCE

To all intents and purposes, my job should be easy right now. There has seldom been a better time to write about Celtic. We’ve regained our European pride, another championship is imminent and we are only 3 games away from another treble.

Beneath Celtic’s Glorious Façade, Problems Remain

If there is one thing I have learned however, from over 3 decades of following Scottish football, it is that outward appearances can be deceiving. Celtic have a huge problem behind the scenes, one that continues to damage our chances for the future.

I refer of course, to the seeming lack of talent coming through from the youth team and the academy set-up.  This is hardly a revelation to anyone who follows Celtic.

What will shock you however, is just how much of this failure is because of the club’s own hubris, complacency and, for want of a better phrase, rank incompetence.

Daniel Cummings: A Case Study in Poor Management

The latest casualty of Celtic’s seeming inability to hold on to our promising youth players is Daniel Cummings. Despite impressing on his Celtic debut against Aston Villa in January, West Ham approached the player a couple of days later with a view to signing him. At the time of West Ham’s approach, Cummings had already been free to speak to other clubs. He entered the last six months of his Celtic contract on January 1st.

Celtic did not even speak to Cummings about a new deal until January 27th. By this time, it was weeks since he became free to talk to anyone about a move.

Suffice to say, Celtic’s offer was well below that of West Ham, about 1.7 million lower according to my sources.

To add insult to injury, Celtic then rejected an offer from West Ham to sign Cummings on deadline day. The offer would have netted Celtic significantly more than the development fee they will now receive in June, as well as a % sell on clause.

A Player Unhappy, Celtic Out of Pocket

So, it would seem that the way this has panned out benefits no-one, except perhaps West Ham.

Celtic lose one of their best young prospects, for minimal returns. A player who doesn’t want to leave Celtic and has been there since the age of 5 does so under a cloud. A cloud that was not of his making.

One could argue that maybe this is just the way Celtic does business with youth players. After all, there is an argument that says putting young talents on big contracts when they remain unproven at first team level is an unnecessary risk.

However, two of Cummings’ fellow B team regulars, Colby Donovan and Francis Turley were both offered new deals last summer. Sources close to Cummings confirmed to me that had an offer been made before December 31st, the player would have been amenable to it.

He is a Celtic fan, his preference would be to stay at Celtic. But if you’re a young man with an uncertain future, and one job pays you 900 quid a week, while the other offers you thousands of pounds a week, which would you choose?

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Blaming the Players Doesn’t Solve the Problem

Celtic have given off the impression in the past that these young players were making trouble, agitating for big money moves away. From what I have seen, and based on what I’ve been told by the people connected to the players who have agreed to share their insights for this story, this simply isn’t true.

The likes of Rocco Vata and Daniel Kelly could still be Celtic players if the club had acted promptly and professionally.

However, in the above cases, as with Daniel Cummings, new contracts discussions did not even begin until after the players had entered the final six months of their deals.

These were all fine young footballers who wanted to play for Celtic, but Celtic simply didn’t do enough to keep them. They believed their own hype, and assumed that because the boys in question were all from Celtic supporting families that new deals would be a formality.

That’s not how football works.

If you show faith in players, they will show faith in you. Celtic didn’t, and now these young men earn a wage elsewhere. We also lost Ben Doak due to similar belligerence.

Additional, Unfair Consequences

Going back to Daniel Cummings, the consequences of Celtic’s failure to act go beyond just the loss of talented young footballer with huge potential. Cummings himself has endured things that no young footballer should have to.

My sources claim, and I have no reason to doubt them, that Cummings was given more encouragement and shown a clearer pathway for his future development in 3 days of talks with West Ham than he was in 13 years at Celtic.

With the club also allowing the narrative of “agendas from players and agents” to go unchallenged in the press, despite knowing it to be false, Cummings himself has come in for a hefty amount of abuse on social media. Fans, acting only on what official sources have told them, accuse Cummings of being a mercenary, only in it for the money, etc.

This is a boy who grew up in Coatbridge and comes from a family steeped in Celtic.

He’s one of us, and he doesn’t deserve this treatment.

No Further Developments

At the time of writing, March 2nd 2025, Celtic have not come back to Cummings or his representatives with any further dialogue since the initial January 27th offer, which they already knew was vastly inferior to West Ham’s offer, was declined.

The player continues to train every day and remains committed to the club for as long as he is there. On a personal note, Cummings is well aware of fans’ anger at his apparent disregard for Celtic. He is a supporter himself, and this is particularly difficult for him to accept.

We know that anger is totally unjustified. The club knows it too, and they have a duty of care to this young man to set the record straight for as long as he is one of their players.

There’s also the small matter of a substantial four-figure sum that Cummings’ family paid out of their own pocket for him to have essential ankle surgery done privately. The injury took place at the club’s training ground, Celtic told the family that this figure would be factored into his next contract, but both parties now know this will never happen.

I Really Wish I Didn’t Have to Write This

I will close this article on a personal note. First of all, I do not know Daniel Cummings personally, but I wish him well for the future. As I said, based on the evidence presented to me, by sources I trust, he is a fine and upstanding young man who I believe will go on to have a successful career in football.

Secondly, from my own perspective, I want to make something abundantly clear. I take no pleasure in writing this. I love Celtic, as the vast majority of you reading this also do.

However, recent history in other parts of Glasgow has shown us just how dangerous it can be, when fan loyalty blinds you to your club’s own, obvious failings. I write this not from a position of anger, but from a position of hope. Hope that Celtic will do the right thing, learn from these mistakes and treat these young players with more dignity and respect.

It’s too late for Daniel Cummings, but hopefully he is the last young prospect Celtic lose to their own hubris.