Brendan Rodgers resigns as Celtic manager
Celtic's Northern Irish head coach Brendan Rodgers applauds the fans following the UEFA Europa League league-stage football match between Celtic and Sturm Graz at Celtic Park in Glasgow on October 23, 2025. (Photo by ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP)
Audio By Vocalize
Brendan Rodgers
resigned as Celtic manager on Monday, the club announced, after the Scottish
giants' lacklustre start to the season.
The club said
former boss Martin O'Neill and former player Shaun Maloney would take charge of
the team until a permanent successor is appointed.
Rodgers' second
spell at Celtic ended after Sunday's 3-1 Scottish Premiership defeat at Hearts
left them eight points adrift of the Edinburgh side.
"Football
manager Brendan Rodgers has today tendered his resignation" and "will
leave his role with immediate effect", Celtic said in a statement.
"Brendan
leaves with our thanks for the role he has played during a period of continued
success for the club and we wish him further success in the future."
The club added
that the search for a replacement was already underway.
"We are
pleased that during this interim period former Celtic manager, Martin O'Neill
and former Celtic player, Shaun Maloney have agreed to take charge of Celtic
first-team matters," it said.
Rodgers, 52,
returned for a second spell at Celtic Park in 2023, winning successive titles,
to add to his league triumphs from 2017 and 2018.
He previously managed
Swansea, Liverpool and Leicester and arrived at Celtic for the second time in
June 2023 to succeed Ange Postecoglou.
The Northern
Irishman had been at Celtic between May 2016 and February 2019, completing successive
league and cup trebles.
His first season
in charge saw Celtic finish with a record 106 points and become the first
Scottish side to complete a top-flight season undefeated since 1899.
Rodgers
continued Celtic's domestic supremacy by winning league titles in the 2023-24
and 2024-25 seasons and also lifted the Scottish Cup and the Scottish League
Cup.
But clouds were
gathering over the club this season with Celtic knocked out of the Champions
League by Kazakhstan minnows Kairat Almaty.
Rodgers had
appeared at odds with his employers over their summer transfer window policy.
After Celtic's
first defeat at Dundee in 37 years this month, he said the team had "lost
a lot of firepower, a lot of goals".
"And
there's no way you'll go into a race and be given the keys to a Honda Civic and
say, 'I want you to drive it like a Ferrari'. It's not going to happen."
Celtic's main
shareholder Dermot Desmond hit back, saying Rodgers' criticism had come
"entirely out of the blue".
"At no
point prior to those remarks had he raised any such concerns with me, Michael
(Nicholson, chief executive), or any member of the board or executive
team," Desmond said.
"In
reality, he was given final say over all football matters and was consistently
backed in the recruitment process -- including record investment in players he
personally identified and approved."


Leave a Comment