Currently navigating to what will probably be a 55th Scottish Title, Celtic make their comeback to UEFA Champions League (UCL) activity where they will aim to secure a spot in the competition’s elimination rounds. They’re present thanks to a four-match UCL undefeated streak (W1, D3), which marks a significant enhancement for a team that finished last in their group in four of their previous five UCL seasons.
Competing at home should deliver a substantial advantage for Celtic, who haven’t suffered defeat here in any tournament since 2023! Over a year unbeaten on their own turf is remarkable, as is their outstanding home performance against Swiss rivals (W8, D1) ahead of the visit of a winless and already ousted Young Boys. Celtic achieved clean sheets in six of the earlier nine encounters and scored at least three times in the most recent two, so understandably enter as strong frontrunners.
Circumstances couldn’t have been much worse internationally for Young Boys, who entered round seven as one of only three teams yet to secure a point, losing six matches in one tournament for the first time in their European journey. Not only faltering in Europe, the 17-time Swiss titleholders are also positioned in the lower half of their national league and face the threat of dropping into the relegation zone should they fail to achieve some stability.
Considering the situation, this may not be a priority for Young Boys, who not only have no chance of recovery, but also a fruitless away record against Scottish sides across their historical clashes (D1, L2). Adding to their woes is the fact that Young Boys’ away success during UCL qualification is their sole triumph across the last nine European away fixtures (D3, L5), losing all three in the group stage while conceding in five of the six periods of play.
Players to monitor: Celtic’s Daizen Maeda approaches this in excellent condition, contributing to six goals across his last six official outings (G4, A2), while his last nine finishes occurred at home. For Young Boys, Silvere Ganvoula might serve as a key player, contributing six goals this campaign, although only two of his scoring performances resulted in wins.
Key stat: Young Boys have allowed 5+ goals in three UCL matches this season and could become the first team ever to do so four times in a single European competition.