Pundit Michael Stewart says Celtic are "in the bin" mentally as the Premiership champions stumbled once again in a horrific season.
Neil Lennon's side are lurching from one bad result to the next in a campaign fans are desperate to see the back of and Saturday's 2-1 home loss to St Mirren is now the latest setback.
Kristian Dennis struck the deserved opener after 18 minutes before Odsonne Edouard replied to level.
But the Buddies continued to dominate and Ilkay Durmus smashed home what turned out to be the winner eight minutes before the break to seal his side's first win at Parkhead since April 1990.
And Stewart, who has on occasion featured in the club's Pass to Paradise matchday coverage for season ticket holders, was scathing in his criticism.
He told BBC Sportsound: "The season is whimpering to a sorry end.
"Tactically Jim Goodwin and St Mirren bossed it. They were able to impose their game on Celtic rather than the other way around.
"It has got to the stage where you can't expect anything else from Celtic because they are psychologically done.
"They are in the bin. They haven't got anything else to give.
"And the only way that is going to change is a new season which isn't going to happen until this one is finished, or there is changes.
He continued: "There is no drive or determination within the team. As soon as one thing goes against them they fall apart."