Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
Sport
Robbie Hanratty

Former Celtic boss Neil Lennon explains why he took the Rapid Bucharest job

Former Celtic boss Neil Lennon has explained how he ended up being appointed Rapid Bucharest manager. 

The Irishman, who has regularly been seen on punditry duty during his time outside coaching, signed a 2-year deal with the Romanian outfit.

Lennon, 52, ended an 18 month hiatus on Monday having previously had a spell with Omonia Nicosia in Cyprus, and he's revealed what the deciding factor was in his decision to work overseas once again. 

"It sort of materialised over the last month or so," he told talkSPORT.

"I got contacted by an agent, the CV went in and then I spoke to the club on a Zoom call.

​"I was in Athens about 10 days ago and the owner flew out and the owner flew out to meet me from Bucharest and we had a long conversation about how he sees the club and what my role would be. 

"And I was very impressed by him. He's got big plans for the club. He's only taken over the club in the last couple of years but already he's putting his stamp on the club. 

"He's a very principled man, I liked him a lot and I liked the project he was trying to sell of the club. 

"It's got a great history, it's sort of  bereft of titles for quite a considerable time and the owner now wants to make inroads on the championship."

Lennon is inheriting a Rapid team who have won just once in their last 10 games to finish sixth in the Romanian top-flight but he knows that he has what it takes to turn their fortunes around next season. 

He continued: "They split the league like they do up in Scotland and before the split, they were going very well. They were second.

"But when the split came, they just lost a lot of form and sort of fell away in the title race really. 

"So, they were really disappointed with that obviously, they got rid of the previous coach, and they wanted to change the mentality and the intensity into the training and build a bit of discipline about the club. 

"Obviously they wanted me to fit that criteria and I mean, I can just bring a different outlook and culture to the club. 

"It's very exciting for me. Romanian football has sort of been in the doldrums the last couple of decades but it's on the up again. 

"The national team are back in the Euros. You remember that great team in the 90s with (Gheorghe) Hagi and (Dan) Petrescu, a lot of these guys are coaching here. 

"Petrescu is at Cluj and Hagi's at another club called Farul, so the interest in football here is huge." 

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.