Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment | OneFootball

Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment | OneFootball

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Icon: The Celtic Star

The Celtic Star

·10. November 2025

Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Celtic produced a stirring response to Thursday’s Danish disappointment at Parkhead yesterday with a convincing 4–0 win over Kilmarnock, a result that trimmed Hearts’ lead at the top to seven points (having played a game more) and, perhaps more importantly, reminded everyone that the Hoops still have a say in this title race, despite the narrative of late.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Johnny Kenny opens the scoring. Celtic v Kilmarnock, Scottish Premiership Celtic Park, 9 November 2025. Photo Mark Runnacles IMAGO /Shutterstock


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Johnny Kenny continued his remarkable run of domestic form with his fourth goal in as many games, Kieran Tierney smashed home his first since returning to the club, Daizen had a Daizen day, and substitute Arne Engels turned in a cameo that oozed quality and conviction. It was far from flawless, but it was ruthless, and it came at just the right time.

The breakthrough came from the in-form Kenny, who’s starting to play like a real number nine. After striking the post early on, his sharpness and composure inside the box gave Celtic the lead their play deserved, with an assist from Reo Hatate, who had his best game since what feels like forever.

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Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Kieran Tierney of Celtic scores his team’s second goal during the Premiership match between Celtic and Kilmarnock at Celtic Park on November 09, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

The second goal was moment that lit up the afternoon, Kieran Tierney’s thunderous finish from distance. His celebration was a cocktail of delight, defiance, and maybe a little frustration. Whether it was aimed at the critics, his boss, the doubters, or simply the frustration of recent weeks, it didn’t much matter. It was a strike that belonged to the Kieran Tierney of old, power, purpose, and pride. And yes, Liam Scales can absolutely claim the assist.

Luke McCowan came close to delivering a goal-of-the-season contender, meeting a looping ball with a spectacular acrobatic effort that was arrowing toward the net before being deflected wide. It was an audacious moment that deserved more, and summed up Celtic’s confidence going forward.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Daizen Maeda of Celtic scores his team’s third goal during the Premiership match between Celtic and Kilmarnock at Celtic Park on November 09, 2025.(Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Daizen Maeda, meanwhile, managed to miss one of the easiest chances of his or anyone’s career in the first half, a genuine “what the hell happened there?” moment. But football offers second chances, even third and fourth in Daizen’s case. And when Arne Engels bent a perfectly timed and weighted pass from the right hand side, into his path after the break, Maeda buried it emphatically. Power, precision, and redemption all rolled into one for a player who could easily have had a hat-trick.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Arne Engels of Celtic scores his team’s fourth goal from the penalty spot during the Premiership match between Celtic and Kilmarnock at Celtic Park on November 09, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Engels’ introduction changed the tone of a second half that was drifting. Calm in possession, brave in distribution, and deadly from dead balls, he looked every bit the midfield dynamo Celtic spent a record fee on. There is often a debate with Engels. Does the fee weigh heavy, or does the shirt? Who knows, but consistency has been hard to find for the young Belgian. O’Neill however has freed him. He seems relaxed under this manager, and the fact he’s such a reliable type from dead balls means he has to be a starter.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Yang celebrates with Daizen Maeda. Celtic v Kilmarnock, Scottish Premiership Celtic Park, 9 November 2025. Photo Mark Runnacles IMAGO /Shutterstock

When Yang, returning from the cold as a second half sub, won a late penalty after being hauled down in the box, Engels stepped up and dispatched it with authority. If this was an audition for most impactful sub in Scottish football, this weekend, he passed it in style. On in the 78th minute. A goal and an assist. Job done. He’s often looked a player shaped by both talent and temperament, maybe now that’s a mix of Martin O’Neill’s steel and Shaun Maloney’s subtlety. Either way, there’s certainly more to come.

Kilmarnock had their moments, hitting the bar, forcing Kasper Schmeichel into a fine save, but offered little beyond effort and organisation, or let’s call it what it was, huff and puff and little else. It was also very kind of Stuart Kettlewell to play the work-experience kid in goal.

Meanwhile, Brad Lyons’ “tackle” on Maeda was the kind of moment that makes you wonder if refereeing in Scotland is performance art and Celtic is their stage. The sort of neck high challenge that would even have seen red at Murrayfield the day before, yet Don Robertson reached for yellow. Perhaps he left the red card at home, or maybe he was just having a stinker. Either way, it was a howler, and he’ll be avoiding his notifications for a while yet, or maybe not. In a sea of Scottish refereeing plankton, Robertson somehow remains the most buoyant floater of all.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Callum McGregor celebrates with Auston Trusty. Celtic v Kilmarnock, Scottish Premiership Celtic Park, 9 November 2025. Photo Mark Runnacles IMAGO /Shutterstock

Auston Trusty deservedly picked up the Man of the Match award, calm, composed, and commanding throughout. But the real surprise came before a ball was even kicked. Jahmai Simpson-Pusey handed his Celtic debut, and at right-back, no less. It was a bold call for a player who’s never featured in that role professionally, yet he handled it admirably. He played it safe, and that was the smart move.

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Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Jahmai Simpson-Pusey of Celtic and Zac Williams of Kilmarnock. Celtic v Kilmarnock, Scottish Premiership Celtic Park, 9 November 2025. Photo Mark Runnacles IMAGO /Shutterstock

With Celtic’s right flank a constant source of tactical tinkering, perhaps having a centre-half type behind whoever plays ahead of him isn’t such a bad idea. Time will tell, but for now, the young City kid can be proud of a quietly impressive debut.

Post-match, Martin O’Neill confirmed what’s fast becoming Celtic’s biggest worry, the injury list keeps growing. Marcelo Saracchi joined the walking wounded with another Celtic hamstring injury, while both Alistair Johnston and Callum Osmand will now require surgery on theirs. If it wasn’t for bad luck and all that.

Artikelbild:Celtic’s stirring response to Danish disappointment

Celtic interim manager Martin O’Neill during the Premier League match between Celtic and Kilmarnock at Celtic Park on November 09, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

With Jota already a long-term absentee and Cameron Carter-Vickers sidelined following Achilles surgery, the only glimmer of good news is the potential return of Kel Iheanacho after the international break.

It’s a much-needed win after the midweek European disappointment, and it cuts the gap to seven points with a game in hand, to a team whose manager is already decrying the lack of stoppage time, despite only managing two shots on target over the previous 90 minutes. He’ll break folks, you can take that to the bank.

Celtic will hope to carry that momentum into the next league outing under the lights in Paisley against St Mirren on Saturday, 22 November. The league won’t be decided then, but the weeks to follow will shape it, and this was the kind of afternoon that keeps Celtic’s title hopes burning.

A day for goals, grit, and a wee bit of guile too. And maybe, just maybe, the continuation of something steadier under O’Neill’s watch, if he hangs around of course.

Niall J

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Celtic in the Eighties and Willie Fernie – Putting on the Style both by David Potter. Photo The Celtic Star

Danny McGrain signing copies of Celtic in the Eighties by David Potter. Photo: Celtic Star Books

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