Celtic came from behind to beat Spartak Moscow 3-2 at the Luzhniki Stadium and go briefly to the top of UEFA Champions League Group G.

Late goal from Greece international seals historic win

Deliver low

Spartak Moscow Team Statistics Celtic 2 Goals 3 1 1st Half Goals 1 3 Shots on Target 8 5 Shots off Target 4 5 Blocked Shots 2 9 Corners 5 14 Fouls 14 0 Offsides 2 0 Yellow Cards 2 1 Red Cards 0 80.4 Passing Success 75.4 16 Tackles 15 93.8 Tackles Success 80 57 Possession 43 47 Territorial Advantage 53 453 Total Passes 338 23 Total Crosses 17 143 Lost Balls 145 50 Recoveries 55 67.9 1st Half Poss. 32.1 46.9 2nd Half Poss. 53.1

Celtic came from behind to beat 10-man Spartak Moscow 3-2 at the Luzhniki Stadium and record a first away win in the group stages of the UEFA Champions League. Gary Hooper put the Hoops ahead on 12 minutes after slotting home Mikael Lustig's cross from the right. But Spartak took the lead thanks to goals from Emmanuel Emenike either side of the break. The Hoops refused to bow down, however, and the hosts were reduced to 10 men just after the hour mark when Juan Insaurralde was sent off for pulling down Hooper as he ran in on goal. Neil Lennon's side made their advantage pay when Spartak captain Dmitri Kombarov deflected substitute James Forrest's shot into his own goal on 71 minutes. Georgios Samaras then won it for the visitors when he rose highest in the box to head home Emilio Izaguirre's cross in stoppage time. The win gave Celtic four points from their opening two games of Group G ahead of the double-header against section favourites Barcelona. The Parkhead men had drawn 1-1 with Spartak on their artificial turf in a Champions League play-off game in 2007 but this time they went one better and it was Samaras who came up with the goods. There was little surprise when the Greece striker returned to the Celtic starting XI, with Forrest starting on the bench. The Hoops striker, a favourite of Lennon, made a substitute appearance in the 2-0 SPL win over Motherwell on Saturday after recovering from an elbow injury. Former Hoops wide-man Aiden McGeady returned to the Spartak midfield after being rested for the 3-1 league win over Amkar. The home side forced three corners in the first three minutes, a spell of pressure ending when midfielder Kim Kallstrom barged his way into the Celtic box before firing high over the bar. Spartak had lost the services of keeper Andriy Dykan to injury, his place taken by Sergei Pesiakov. The number two keeper, though, had little chance with Hooper's well-taken goal, which stemmed from Kallstrom's reticence in a 50-50 tackle with Victor Wanyama.The powerful Hoops midfielder played the ball wide to right-back Lustig to deliver low for the former Scunthorpe striker to clip the ball in from around six yards. The Scottish champions retained a threat going forward and in the 24th minute Hooper had the ball in the Spartak net again, this time with a header from a Samaras cross, only to see the flag up for offside. In the 34th minute Emenike got on the end of a Evgeni Makeev cross but headed high over the bar from 10 yards. Moments later, Samaras had a decent chance when Kris Commons flighted a free-kick on to his head but the big Greek failed to make good contact and Pesiakov gathered. Celtic keeper Fraser Forster had his first real save to make from defender Nicolas Pareja's curling free-kick from 25 yards. It looked like Lennon's side would take a lead into the interval but four minutes from the break Emenike knocked the ball past Forster from close range after being set up by Ari, who had latched on to a delightful long ball by Kallstrom. Emenike grabbed his second goal three minutes into the second period. Forster looked slow going down to deal with Ari's drive from long distance and when he spilled it, Demy de Zeeuw pounced to play the ball across goal for the Nigeria striker to tap in. It looked a difficult task for Celtic but they had a chance to level in the 58th minute when Charlie Mulgrew's free-kick from the right found the head of stopper Efe Ambrose but he missed the target. There was some needless controversy surrounding Insaurralde's dismissal. The Spartak defender hauled Hooper back as he raced through on goal from Mulgrew's pass but at first French referee Tony Chapron played on, then, after presumably taking some instruction from one of his officials, he showed the Argentinian the red card. Mulgrew's free-kick, when it was eventually taken, was punched away by Pesiakov, who dealt comfortably with Izaguirre's volley from the rebound. But there was more drama to come in the 71st minute when Forrest's angled shot from 12 yards, after good work from Samaras and Hooper, was saved by Pesiakov before going in off Kombarov. Pesiakov made a good fingertip save from Joe Ledley, who had replaced Mulgrew, and the keeper saved again from Hooper. But with the game in added time Samaras rose to head Izaguirre's cross into the far corner of the net to spark Celtic celebrations.