Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Brendan Rodgers embarrassed in Celtic opener by Gibraltese policeman

Lincoln Red Imps 1 Celtic 0 Former Liverpool coach beaten in opener after Lee Casciaro's scuffed effort decides Champions League qualifier

Ronnie Esplin
Gibraltar
Tuesday 12 July 2016 21:11 BST
Comments
Brendan Rodgers has work to do to keep his Celtic side in the Champions League
Brendan Rodgers has work to do to keep his Celtic side in the Champions League (Getty Images)

Brendan Rodgers' first game as Celtic manager ended in humiliation as his Hoops side were humbled 1-0 by Lincoln Red Imps in in the first leg of their second Champions League qualifier at the Victoria stadium.

The Parkhead side laboured in the searing heat of the goalless first 45 minutes and were then stunned when Lee Casciaro, who had scored Gibraltar's first international goal against Scotland at Hampden in 2015 and who works as a policeman in his day job, sensationally put the part-timers ahead in the 47th minute.

Hoops striker Leigh Griffiths hit the woodwork twice as the Scottish champions battled for their dignity, but, buoyed by their stunning breakthrough, the home side held out for a result which ranks as the most embarrassing in Celtic's history. The return game at Celtic Park next week should still be a formality, but Rodgers' tenure has begun in the worst possible way.

It had promised to be a stroll for the Glasgow club. There were around 300 Celtic supporters in the away end - with more interspersed with the home fans in the crowd of less than 2,000 - to see French striker Moussa Dembele make his competitive debut on his 20th birthday. Attacking midfielder Ryan Christie was making his European debut, with last season's top scorer Griffiths shunted wide on the right.

Swedish referee Andreas Ekberg punctuated the opening stages with his whistle, mainly for fouls against Celtic, although Hoops defender Efe Ambrose picked up a booking in the 10th minute for a foul on Casciaro.

The Scottish champions, wearing their black and gold kit, toiled in the heat. A couple of crosses from Griffiths failed to find a team-mate before Hoops goalkeeper Craig Gordon was forced to make a decent save from Liam Walker's low 20-yard effort as the home side slowly began to edge forward.

In the 31st minute Dembele, who had a quite start, headed in skipper Scott Brown's free-kick, but was adjudged to have fouled keeper Raul Navas. Five minutes from the break Nava pushed a powerful drive from Dembele past the post for a corner which came to nothing before the Celtic striker fired an angled-drive wide of the far post.

The match exploded into life two minutes after the restart, following a Navas save from Griffiths. Casciaro took advantage of Ambrose's hesitation when chasing a long Walker pass to stab the ball past Gordon from 12 yards to widespread disbelief.

Moments later, as Celtic reeled in a state of shock, Lincoln midfielder Antonio Calderon fired just over the bar from 14 yards.

Rodgers brought on James Forrest and Stuart Armstrong for Christie and Tom Rogic before Griffiths' shot from 10 yards was deflected on to the bar by Carlos Garcia and Lincoln captain Roy Chipolina completed the clearance.

As Celtic's desperation grew, Armstrong blasted over the bar to groans from the increasingly worried Hoops supporters. In the 72nd minute Nadir Ciftci replaced Dembele in what was Rodgers' last throw of the dice, as scorer Casciaro came off to a hero's reception.

Five minutes later, after Griffiths was fouled by Joe Chipolina 25 yards from goal, the former Wolves striker cracked the bar with the free-kick, with Nir Bitton beaten to the rebound. As Celtic stepped up the pressure in the final 10 minutes Navas saved from Ciftci, who subsequently missed the target with a header.

The final whistle, after four added minutes, confirmed the Hoops' embarrassment as the Lincoln players and supporters celebrated with justifiable pride.

Rodgers insisted there was “no embarrassment” in losing and backed his side to turn the tie around in the home leg. “We've given ourselves a bit of work to do," he conceded. "I saw enough from the game, we created enough to go through.

”Of course you never want to lose the game. You let the local team have their night, we press on, another week's training and be better for it. There's no embarrassment. We never took our chances and they took theirs. The second leg will be different."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in