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Home » This Week » ‘I’m not so sure I learned much’ – O’Neill knows what Celtic need after cup win
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‘I’m not so sure I learned much’ – O’Neill knows what Celtic need after cup win

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: January 18, 2026 11:17 pm
Yeti NewsBot
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'I'm not so sure I learned much' - O'Neill knows what Celtic need after cup win

‘I’m not so sure I learned much’ – O’Neill’s Celtic Reality Check After Cup Win

The final whistle at Beechwood Park brought relief, not rapture. Celtic had navigated their Scottish Cup fourth-round tie against Auchinleck Talbot, a heroic sixth-tier side, with a professional but profoundly uninspiring 2-0 victory. For manager Martin O’Neill, a man renowned for his passionate touchline demeanour and tactical clarity, the post-match assessment was stark. “I’m not so sure I learned much,” he admitted, a statement that echoes louder than any celebratory cheer could around a sparsely populated Parkhead. This was not just a comment on a cup tie; it was a public diagnosis of a squad stretched to its limits and a transfer window slipping dangerously by.

Contents
  • A Shadow Squad’s Laborious Lesson
  • The Glaring January Window Void
  • O’Neill’s Known Quantities and the Road Ahead
  • Predictions: A Pivotal Fortnight for Celtic’s Season
  • Conclusion: More Than a Cup Win, A Crystal Clear Message

A Shadow Squad’s Laborious Lesson

O’Neill’s team selection was a clear signal of priorities and necessity. With only captain Callum McGregor retaining his place from the midweek league win over Falkirk, this was an audition for the periphery. Stephen Welsh, recalled from a loan at Motherwell, made his first appearance in over a month. Winger Michel-Ange Balikwisha was thrust from the cold into the starting XI, and striker Johnny Kenny was given a rare chance to lead the line. On paper, it was an opportunity for these players to state their case. On the pitch, it revealed a concerning lack of depth.

The performance was, in O’Neill’s own likely unspoken words, laborious. While the result was never truly in doubt against the valiant part-timers, the fluency, intensity, and cutting edge expected of Celtic were absent. The patterns of play were predictable, the tempo was manageable for the hosts, and the gap in quality between Celtic’s first XI and their understudies was glaringly apparent. O’Neill didn’t learn much because the match confirmed what he already suspected: the squad depth is not fit for purpose in a sustained title race and European ambition.

The Glaring January Window Void

This cup match cannot be viewed in isolation. It is intrinsically linked to O’Neill’s repeated and “forthright” public calls for January reinforcements. More than halfway through the transfer window, the Parkhead arrivals board remains blank. This inertia creates a dual problem: it fails to bolster the first team for immediate challenges, and it does nothing to increase competition for places, leaving the manager reliant on players he demonstrably lacks faith in for meaningful minutes.

The areas of need are no secret to anyone observing Celtic:

  • Defensive Reinforcement: Stephen Welsh’s recall itself is a stop-gap. A dominant, reliable centre-back to partner or challenge the current options is a perennial need, especially for European nights.
  • Attending to the Attack: Johnny Kenny’s endeavour against Talbot was clear, but the lack of a prolific, physical alternative or competitor for Kyogo Furuhashi is a strategic vulnerability.
  • Creative Midfield Spark: Beyond McGregor and Matt O’Riley, the creative burden is heavy. An injury to either could derail their season, as the Talbot game showed a lack of inventive passing from deep.
  • Wide Threat: The experiment with Balikwisha highlighted the drop-off beyond the established wingers. Pace, directness, and consistent delivery are required.

O’Neill’s post-Talbot comments are a calculated message to the board. The “I learned nothing” line is a critique of his own squad’s fringe players, but it is ultimately a powerful indictment of a transfer strategy that has, so far, failed to act.

O’Neill’s Known Quantities and the Road Ahead

What Martin O’Neill does know is the formidable quality of his core starting eleven. He knows the relentless engine of Callum McGregor, the genius of Kyogo, and the defensive solidity of Cameron Carter-Vickers. This is a team capable of breathtaking football and has them firmly in the title hunt. However, he also knows the brutal calendar that awaits. The demands of the Premiership, the latter stages of the Scottish Cup, and the ambition to make a mark in Europe next season require a robust squad, not just a stellar first team.

The victory over Auchinleck Talbot was a fixture navigated, a box ticked. But it served as a 90-minute microcosm of Celtic’s current state: a powerhouse operating on a fragile foundation. The lack of new signings risks burning out his key players and leaves him with no credible alternatives to change a game when Plan A isn’t working against more formidable opponents than Talbot.

Predictions: A Pivotal Fortnight for Celtic’s Season

The final two weeks of this January transfer window will define the trajectory of Celtic’s season and the early tenure of Martin O’Neill. The manager’s public stance has now moved from hinting to explicit critique. The pressure is squarely on the football operations department to deliver.

We predict two potential paths:

  • If Celtic Act: Should the board back O’Neill with two or three quality signings—a defender, a midfielder, and an attacker—it will be a massive statement of intent. It will energise the fanbase, provide O’Neill with tangible tools, and install Celtic as clear, deep-squad favourites for the domestic double.
  • If Celtic Stand Pat: Failure to recruit will be seen as a catastrophic failure of ambition. It will place unsustainable pressure on O’Neill’s key men, increase the risk of injury, and hand the initiative to a Rangers side who have been active. It could turn a strong position into a season of fraught, nerve-shredding run-ins.

O’Neill is a fighter, and his team will fight regardless. But even the greatest generals need troops. The Talbot game proved he is sending some into battle ill-equipped.

Conclusion: More Than a Cup Win, A Crystal Clear Message

Martin O’Neill’s “I’m not so sure I learned much” comment will resonate long after the Scottish Cup fifth-round draw is made. It was the most honest assessment possible from a manager who saw his fears played out in live action. The win over Auchinleck Talbot was never about the result; it was a stark audit of Celtic’s squad depth in the context of a silent January.

The message from the manager is now crystal clear. He knows what his first team needs: support, competition, and quality in depth. The question is no longer about what O’Neill learned on the pitch in Ayrshire, but what the Celtic hierarchy has learned from his stark warning. The clock is ticking, and the success of their season hinges on the lessons they choose to act upon in the days ahead. The victory is secured, but the real battle for Celtic’s ambitions is being fought in the transfer market, and currently, they are losing.


Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.

TAGGED:Brendan O'NeillCeltic FCGuardiola post-match reactionScottish footballSutton Celtic analysis
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