PSG clobber Celtic, makes them look like u-21 on their own pitch

Celtic sustained their heaviest ever home European defeat as Neymar led the way for Paris St-Germain in the Champions League group stage opener.

The world’s most expensive player coolly finished and then had a hand in PSG’s second, which was finished emphatically by Kylian Mbappe.

Edinson Cavani converted a penalty for the visitors’ third before the break. Mikael Lustig’s own goal was followed by Cavani’s second of the night, a superb diving header.

Celtic manager responds to the results

Brendan Rodgers said his Celtic side played like “under-12s” for a spell in the first half of their 5-0 Champions League hammering by Paris St-Germain.

“You have to look after the ball and make it work for you and, first half, we didn’t do that – we played like under-12s at times,” Rodgers said.

“It is confidence, it’s belief. We are obviously missing some decisive players that can help us at this level, but it is always going to be very, very tough. That is the reality.

“I don’t want to be too tough on the players. This is the potential champions of the tournament we are playing and, with where we are at, with all due respect and where these guys are at, it’s not just one or two levels, it’s three or four levels beyond us.

“But what we do have to do is always be competitive and we weren’t for that first half.

“But, the second half, we were much better and we showed the supporters that – and they acknowledged that.”

Heavy deafeat

It was Celtic’s heaviest home defeat in European competition and Rodgers was left “very disappointed” with his side’s first-half showing.

“Defensively, we were just too far off them, not tight enough and not close enough,” he said.

“Secondly, I was disappointed in how we retained the ball – from our midfield to our front players, we didn’t keep the ball long enough.

“If you do that against what is arguably the best team in the world then they will punish you.

“I was much happier with that first half-hour of the second half. We were much more aggressive in our game and that allowed us to create more chances.

“But you also have to give credit to them – this is a team that is really special. They are going to be close to winning it for sure.”

Champions League hopes

However, he remains hopeful his charges can still enjoy a solid Champions League campaign.

“The thing I said to the players is you have to have the belief and, maybe a bit similar to last year, it might take us a game or two to get into the competition,” he said.

“Then we recognise the level we are at and then you perform better.”

PSG coach Unai Emery was delighted with the way his charges coped with the atmosphere at Celtic Park.

“The most difficult thing here is to cope with the rhythm Celtic play at and the intensity they play with and, of course, the support they have with them,” he said.

“I think my team showed a lot of character. It was really a team effort and it showed a really controlled approach to the game, which I’m very pleased with.”