Lincoln Red Imps 1–0 Celtic

Lincoln Red Imps 1–0 Celtic

Aerial view of Victoria Stadium, Gibraltar
Event 2016–17 UEFA Champions League second qualifying round – First leg
Date 12 July 2016 (2016-07-12)
Venue Victoria Stadium, Gibraltar
Referee Andreas Ekberg (Sweden)
Attendance 1,632

Lincoln Red Imps vs Celtic was a football match played on 12 July 2016 at Victoria Stadium, Gibraltar. The match was a UEFA Champions League second qualifying round tie between Lincoln Red Imps, the champions of the 2015–16 Gibraltar Premier Division and Celtic, winners of the 2015–16 Scottish Premiership. The result, a 1–0 victory for Lincoln, is considered one of the greatest shocks in European football, and has been described by some media outlets as possibly Celtic's most humiliating defeat, dubbing it the Shock of Gibraltar.

At the time, the Gibraltar Premier Division was among the lowest ranked football leagues in the UEFA coefficient, while in the previous season Celtic had competed in the Group Stage of the Europa League.

Build-up

The match was Brendan Rodgers' first competitive match in charge of Celtic.

After victory in the 2015–16 Gibraltar Premier Division, Lincoln Red Imps under Uruguayan coach Julio César Ribas went into the tie having won 14 successive league titles, equaling a European record. As one of the lowest ranked teams in the UEFA Champions League, they entered in the first qualifying round where they faced Estonian side FC Flora. Despite a 2–1 defeat in Tallinn, a 2–0 victory in Gibraltar sent them through to the second qualifying round to face Celtic.[1]

Celtic themselves had been on a run of 6 successive Scottish titles, however, after a disappointing season in cup competition, head coach Ronny Deila resigned and was replaced by former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers. As Celtic received a bye to the second qualifying round, the tie against Lincoln Red Imps was his first competitive game in charge of The Bhoys.

Match

Lee Casciaro (right) scored the only goal of the match.

In Lincoln's matchday squad, 8 players were at the time full internationals for the Gibraltar national football team. Starting up front was Lee Casciaro, who had previously scored against Scotland at Hampden Park in a 6–1 victory for Scotland. Celtic's starting 11 contained the previous season's top scorer Leigh Griffiths as well as new signing Moussa Dembélé in attack. The first half saw the visitors dominate possession yet the artificial surface at Victoria Stadium meant that they struggled to carve out any clear cut chances. Despite a disallowed goal from Moussa Dembélé after a foul on Raúl Navas, the two sides went in goalless at half-time.

In the second half, Celtic's slow start was quickly punished when Lee Casciaro latched onto a through ball from midfield, outsmarting Efe Ambrose before firing a low shot past Craig Gordon. Shortly afterwards, Antonio Calderon fired a shot over the crossbar while Celtic were still reeling from going behind. The introductions of James Forrest, Stuart Armstrong and Nadir Ciftci failed to turn the tide in favour of Celtic, however, as Griffiths could only strike the crossbar twice as Lincoln held out for a shock victory.[2]

Details

Lincoln Red Imps
Celtic
GK 1 Spain Raúl Navas
DF 2 Gibraltar Jean-Carlos Garcia
DF 3 Gibraltar Joseph Chipolina
DF 5 Gibraltar Ryan Casciaro
DF 14 Gibraltar Roy Chipolina (c)
MF 6 Portugal Bernardo Lopes
MF 88 Gibraltar Liam Walker  86'
MF 19 Spain Antonio Calderón
MF 20Spain Yeray Patiño  90+4'
MF 10Gibraltar Kyle Casciaro
FW 7 Gibraltar Lee Casciaro  74'
Substitutes:
GK 13Spain Manuel Soler
DF 16Spain Chechu
DF 18Gibraltar Kenneth Chipolina  90+4'
MF 4Gibraltar Anthony Bardon  86'
MF 22Gibraltar Leon Clinton
MF 86Portugal Fernando Livramento
FW 11Gibraltar George Cabrera  74'
Manager:
Uruguay Julio Cesar Ribas
GK 1 Scotland Craig Gordon
DF 22 Switzerland Saidy Janko
DF 28 Denmark Erik Sviatchenko
DF 4 Nigeria Efe Ambrose
DF 63 Scotland Kieran Tierney
MF 8 Scotland Scott Brown (c)
MF 6 Israel Nir Bitton
MF 18 Australia Tom Rogic  58'
FW 9 Scotland Leigh Griffiths
FW 10France Moussa Dembélé  74'
FW 17Scotland Ryan Christie  57'
Substitutes:
GK 38Italy Leo Fasan
DF 23Sweden Mikael Lustig
MF 14Scotland Stuart Armstrong  58'
MF 49Scotland James Forrest  57'
MF 42Scotland Callum McGregor
FW 27England Patrick Roberts
FW 7Turkey Nadir Ciftci  74'
Manager:
Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers

Aftermath

Immediately after the defeat, many sports media outlets regarded this as one of Celtic's most embarrassing defeats, as well as one of the greatest shocks in European football history. The Scotsman described Celtic's defeat as a "humiliation", whilst The Guardian dubbed the result as "The Shock of Gibraltar".[3][4] However, in spite of the result, Celtic went on to win the return leg 3–0 at Celtic Park.[5] Over the course of the next season, Celtic would only go on to lose to three more teams: Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Barcelona, all also in the 2016–17 UEFA Champions League. As a result, the Bhoys went on to win a domestic treble in Brendan Rodgers' first season in charge, finishing the season unbeaten against any other British team. Striker Lee Casciaro went on to say that with each Celtic victory, Lincoln's victory looked better and better.[6]

Conversely, Lincoln's fortunes declined after the defeat to Celtic in the second leg. After losing talisman Liam Walker to arch-rivals Europa F.C. followed by a defeat in the Pepe Reyes Cup, Lincoln found themselves locked in a tight championship race with Europa that eventually saw the Greens come out on top on the last day. The miserable season was compounded when Europa defeated Lincoln in the 2017 Rock Cup final, to win a domestic treble of their own.[7]

References

  1. Armstrong, Gary (20 June 2016). "Who are Lincoln Red Imps? All you need to know about Celtic's Champions League opponents". Daily Record. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  2. Donohoe, Eamonn (12 July 2016). "Lincoln Red Imps 1–0 Celtic". BBC Sport. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  3. "Lincoln Red Imps 1 – 0 Celtic: Stunning upset in Rodgers’ first match". The Scotsman. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  4. "Shock of Gibraltar: is Celtic’s defeat by Lincoln Red Imps their worst ever?". The Guardian. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  5. McLaughlin, Chris (20 July 2016). "Celtic 3–0 Lincoln Red Imps". BBC Sport. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  6. MacDonald, Kenny (18 May 2017). "Lee Casciaro reckons Lincoln Red Imps' win over Celtic gets better every time the Hoops go another game unbeaten". The Scottish Sun. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  7. "Kike the star as Europa win Gibtelecom Rock Cup". Football Gibraltar. 28 May 2017. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
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