Celtic Manager Brandon roders After Deedan Maida attitude Japan International led a stoppage-time winner against Motherwell.
MAEDA’s diving header sealed the 3–2 win as Celtic came from behind to retreat two points William Hill Premiership Leader heart.
Forward had set his heart on summer moves, but the failure to secure the attackers into Celtic’s transfer window meant that he had to live.
The Roders have since shifted the 27 -year -old in an unfamiliar right -wing role for the same reason and ended to the left and then through the center before attaining the winner in an exciting competition.
“He is only entitled to the credit,” said Rhoders. “This is a boy I saw before coming here, then for more than two years, he has given his heart and soul to this club.
“Everything that happened in summer is well documented and it is not easy. If it affects a player like him, you know how deep it is.
“He is probably playing in the third (favorite) position if you asked him, because we have a difference on that side. He just got with it.
“You see the difference in which he comes. His pressure, intensity, everything changes for him. I felt that the type that can make you a goal. He takes a good step and he gets a goal.
“I am like this, I am very happy for him and his family because he has been given a lot to this club and he will continue to do so.”
Celtic opened scoring through Kelechi Ihnecho’s penalty, but Epostolos Stamatopolos replaced the game with diving header and spot-kick.
Motherwell’s goalkeeper Callum Ward made some good defense, but gifted Benjamin Nagren with a loose pass with a equal as visitors committed to visiting the back of Jens Barthl Asku.
The Roders said: “This was a great victory for us. You can see why Motherwell did not lose a game. How they build the game and the confidence with which they play – the coach deserves a large amount because we were really to be on it and was held under our pressure.
“We got a goal from it, but there were other moments where they came through the pitch and they were much more creditable for what they give for the game.
“I felt that our players are entitled to it. When you go back, it is not easy to play here. But we kept fighting. The sub -sub -impact in the game made a lot of impact for us.
“In that last 15 minutes where we pinned them back and extended the ball at a speed and created an opportunity, it was great to see it.”
Asku suffered his first defeat as a motherwell manager, but said: “I am proud to take out how we invest in this football game, not only to show and get a scary draw, but really to know and win it.”
And he had no regrets on the nature of Celtic’s equality.
“This is how we see ourselves succeed,” he said. “One thing is getting as much as possible in the league and the second thing is that our players should be developed to the next level and make them interesting for big clubs so that we can also make good businesses.
“Sometimes there is a little mistake that the best team is able to clearly punish, which I think everyone is disappointed about now, but there is much more positivity than negative to take away from how we play in the big picture.”