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Celtic players celebrate after hanging on against Hapoel Beer Sheva to qualify for the group stage of the Champions League.
Celtic players celebrate after hanging on against Hapoel Beer-Sheva to qualify for the group stage of the Champions League. Photograph: Abir Sultan/EPA
Celtic players celebrate after hanging on against Hapoel Beer-Sheva to qualify for the group stage of the Champions League. Photograph: Abir Sultan/EPA

Celtic survive Hapoel Beer-Sheva fright to advance in Champions League

This article is more than 7 years old

Hapel Beer-Sheva 2-0 Celtic (4-5 aggregate)
Sahar 21, Hoban 48

Brendan Rodgers suffered “probably the longest 90 minutes” of his managerial career as Celtic survived a scare against Hapoel Beer-Sheva to reach the Champions League group stage for the first time in three years with this narrow aggregate win.

The Scottish champions were heavy favourites to see out the play-off second leg after their 5-2 victory at Parkhead last week but were on the ropes from the early stages at the Turner Stadium.

The Scotland goalkeeper, Craig Gordon, saved a penalty in the 15th minute from Maharan Radi but the relief was only temporary as the substitute Ben Sahar soon headed the Israeli champions ahead.

The visitors conceded a second goal in the 48th minute when a mix-up between Saidy Janko and Gordon allowed the Romania international Ovidiu Hoban the easiest of chances to make it 2-0.

The substitute Moussa Dembélé and Scott Sinclair both went close for Celtic later in the second half but they were unable to get the goal that would have calmed nerves as they clung on to qualify.

Rodgers, the Celtic manager, declared himself “immensely proud”, saying: “It was probably the longest 90 minutes I have faced as a coach, and I think with past experiences that players have had, sometimes they know how it can map out.

“I thought Hapoel Beer-Sheva were outstanding. They had to force the game, of course. They had nothing to lose but they played very well. But I have to congratulate my players, because all the work we have been doing has been based around that mentality and quality of game.

“We know we can’t always play well. A lot of games we have played well. But [this match] was purely about resilience and persistence and it was an amazing effort by the players on the back of everything they have been through before. So huge applause to them and I am delighted they get their rewards after a long pre-season.”

Rodgers believes his players will be all the better for coming through such a fraught experience. He said: “Tonight they added an extra percent to their mentality. I think deep down that maybe they didn’t think they could achieve because of the short period of time we have been working with them.

“But we have built into them a belief that, if you work hard and with an intensity, that will give you confidence and you give yourself a better chance of winning and when you are stuck you can dig it out.

Rodgers insisted there was no surprise that his side rode their luck at times. The former Liverpool manager said: “We felt that was going to be the case. We had to work so hard to shift momentum and block spaces. It was a problem for us because we couldn’t keep the ball. Eventually we went to a back five in order to try to block out the sides of the field, keep a diamond with one up front with Moussa Dembélé coming on. That seemed to settle us in the last 15 to 20 minutes and we got some control then.”

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