Celtic will take a narrow advantage into the second leg of their Champions League third-round qualifying tie after they came from behind to defeat Finnish champions HJK Helsinki 2-1 at Celtic Park on Wednesday.
With Rangers demoted to the third division, entry into Europe’s elite tournament and the millions that go with it are vital as Celtic bid to make up for the loss in attendance money caused by the absence of their fiercest rivals and the home side started at a frantic pace.
However, the Hoops failed to take their early chances and conceded a costly away goal just 90 seconds after the break, when Rasmus Schuller finished from close range.
Gary Hooper fired home a 54th minute equalizer after being picked out in the box by Georgios Samaras, before Charlie Mulgrew headed home a 61st minute winner.
It leaves Celtic with a tough task in the return leg next week as they bid to make the group stages of the competition for the first time since 2008.
“I think Helsinki can count themselves pretty fortunate that it is only 2-1. We have got a week to get ready and the players will benefit from that game tonight,” Celtic manager Neil Lennon said. “We went a goal down and showed plenty of character and they clawed their way back into the game brilliantly and for a bit of luck or better finishing they would have won the tie more comfortably.”
HJK coach Antti Muurinen said the result gave his side a good chance to go through.
At Celtic Park, Kris Commons recovered from an ankle knock to join Hooper up front, while Irish striker Anthony Stokes had to be content with a place on the bench.
In a whirlwind start, the Hoops had a chance straight from kick-off when Hooper was sent racing clear, but he sent his strike into the side netting.
Barely a minute later, Victor Wanyama sent a golden chance wide as he connected with a Commons corner at the back post.
Celtic were appealing for a penalty in the 14th minute, when James Forrest appeared to be pushed as he went to head a Samaras cross, but referee Miroslav Zelinka ignored their pleas.
Hooper was the next to have a chance, but he completely miscued Forrest’s cut-back and Joe Ledley volleyed wide as the ball broke to him.
The home side were completely dominating and only a good save from goalkeeper Ville Wallen stopped a Ledley strike from the edge of the box sneaking in.
However, Helsinki slowly settled into the match and Adam Matthews got an important touch to take the ball off Demba Savage as he looked to pull the trigger in the box.
Fraser Forster then had to be at full stretch to prevent Joel Perovuo’s fierce drive from bursting the net.
Celtic failed to heed the warning signs and 90 seconds after the break they found themselves behind.
Schuller broke into the Celtic box and while Forster saved his initial shot with his feet, the ball broke back to him and he fired it past the helpless keeper from 4m.
The goal seemed to be the wake up call Celtic needed and they were nearly level a minute later, when Commons sent a strike off the base of the post, which then rebounded off the back of Wallen’s head and went just wide.
The Hoops got an equalizer in the 54th minute through Hooper. Commons picked out Samaras wide on the left and his cross field pass to Hooper split the Helsinki defense and allowed the striker to fire past Wallen from close range.
Celtic committed more and more men forward and took a 61st minute lead when the unmarked Mulgrew sent a downward header into the turf that bounced over Wallen and into the roof of the net from Commons’ corner.
In other matches on Wednesday, Luxemburg champions F91 Dudelange, surprise conquerors of big-spending Salzburg last week, were brought down to earth in the Champions League qualifiers on Wednesday after losing 4-1 at Maribor.
Dejan Mezga and Brazilian Marcos Tavares scored from free-kicks before halftime in the third qualifying round, first leg tie and Mezga was on target again two minutes after the re-start for the Slovenian double winners.
Robert Beric made it 4-0 in the 77th minute, before Aurelien Joachim pulled one back with his seventh goal in five games in the competition for Dudelange, who overcame Salzburg on away goals after a 4-4 aggregate draw in the last round.
Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, a small-town team who won their first Israeli championship last season, thumped Azerbaijan champions Neftci Baku 4-0 as they continued their surprise progress.
Kiryat Shmona, Israel’s northernmost urban center with a population of 23,000, was for decades the target of rockets and cross-border raids, mainly by Palestinian militants based across the border in Lebanon. Hapoel played the match in Haifa because their own stadium does not meet Champions League requirements.
Belgian champions Anderlecht, who last qualified for the group stage six years ago, hammered Lithuanian champions Ekranas Panevezys 5-0 and former European champions Celtic overcame HJK Helsinki 2-1 at home.
Cameroon forward Jacques Zoua scored a late winner for Swiss champions FC Basel in a 1-0 win away to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s Molde in Norway.
Debrecen’s Ibrahim Sidibe had an eventful match at BATE Borisov, coming on as a substitute for the last half hour to score both goals in a 1-1 draw.
The Senegalese striker met Adamo Coulibaly’s to score with his first touch in the 67th for the Hungarian champions, only to inadvertently turn Aleksandr Pavlov’s cross into his own net in stoppage time to give the Belarus champions a draw.
The lights dimmed and the crowd hushed as Karoline Kristensen entered for her performance. However, this was no ordinary Dutch theater: The temperature was 80°C and the audience naked apart from a towel. Dressed in a swimsuit and to the tune of emotional music, the 21-year-old Kristensen started her routine, performed inside a large sauna, with a bed of hot rocks in the middle. For a week this month, a group of wellness practitioners, called “sauna masters,” are gathering at a picturesque health resort in the Netherlands to compete in this year’s Aufguss world sauna championships. The practice takes its name from a
Roger Federer on Wednesday said that staying involved with tennis in retirement helped him avoid feeling “like an alien” ahead of this week’s Laver Cup in Berlin. Federer, who helped create the tournament, retired at the Laver Cup in London two years ago and has since stayed involved with the competition as an ambassador. “I’m happy I went back right away to some tournaments,” the 43-year-old told reporters. “I feel I ripped the Band-Aid off quite quickly and when I walk around the tennis sites I still feel I belong there,” he said. “I don’t feel like an alien, which is a
Japanese players are moving to English soccer in record numbers and more look set to follow with clubs attracted by their quality, strong work ethic and value for money. Kaoru Mitoma is the standout talent of five Japanese players in the English Premier League, with eight more in the Championship and two in League One. Liverpool midfielder Wataru Endo, the captain of Japan, believes his compatriots are “being held in higher esteem” by English clubs compared with the past. “The staff at Liverpool ask me about lots of Japanese players, not necessarily with a view to a transfer, but just saying this or
Taiwan yesterday survived Bosnia and Herzegovina to win their Davis Cup World Group I tie at the Taipei Tennis Center. The tight series started on Saturday with world No. 123 Jason Tseng losing 3-6, 7-5, 6-4 to Mirza Basic in the opening singles matchup. However, teammate Tony Wu kept the tie even, dominating world No. 86 Damir Dzumhur 6-2, 6-1. Yesterday, 24-year-old Ray Ho and partner 25-year-old Hsu Yu-hsiou kept up the momentum, making short work of Basic and Nerman Fatic, winning 6-3, 6-4. Tseng then suffered another defeat, losing 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 to Dzumhur in a brutal match that lasted more than two