The Midas Touch
The summer of 1970 was not an easy one for
Celtic or their fans to endure. The loss of the Scottish cup final to Aberdeen
in hugely controversial circumstances was followed by the disastrous European
Cup Final defeat to Feyenoord in Milan. There were mutterings in the press that
Stein was losing his Midas touch and that Celtic who had won the Championship
for 5 successive seasons might be usurped by Rangers or even the strong
Aberdeen team of the era. With all of this going on at the club, they headed to
North America for a post season tour which should have been a celebration with
their supporters in Canada and the USA. The tour of 1966 had bonded the players
and set the club up for that historic 1966-67 season but the 1970 tour was very
different.
Celtic played against local sides and also
met English opposition in the shape of Manchester United and the Italians of AS
Bari. Auld and Gemmell had been sent home for misbehaviour and Stein was
introducing some of the ‘Quality Street Gang’ into the first team. Unknown to the
players and supporters was the fact that the Manager had been ‘tapped’ by
Manchester United who wanted him to be their new boss. Jock had a good
relationship with United and knew Matt Busby well. Indeed Busby, like Stein and his old
friend Bill Shankly, was a Lanarkshire man with his roots in the mining
communities which produced so many good players and Managers. Stein had a big decision to make and seemed
distracted.
The match with AS Bari added to Stein’s
stress as the Italians used fair means and foul to stop Celtic playing. Harry
Hood recalls that the Celtic players had to fight fire with fire once the
kicking started…
‘Before kick
off their keeper made a cut throat gesture towards Bobby Lennox and then the
battle started. We went into the game as
a friendly but after 10 minutes it was self-preservation. Lou Macari, who was
getting into the first team was deliberately punched behind the Referee’s back.
I was never a dirty player but I went over the ball about twenty times in the
first half. It was self-preservation.’
Stein watched the battle unfolding and on the
pitch and his anger was growing. He had seen such tactics in South America when
Celtic had faced Racing Club 3 years earlier. As the kicking and tripping
continued, Harry Hood was relieved to hear the half time whistle. However he
did notice an astonishing sight as he trooped off the Park…
‘As the
punch ups were going on all over the park, Jock was getting angrier and
angrier. So at half time he’d had enough. As soon as the half time whistle went
he threw his bag out of the way and dived into the Italian dug-out which
emptied pretty damn quick, except for their coach who was pinned down by Jock.
All I saw was the big man punching lumps out of him.’
Stein’s retribution on the Italian coach was
perhaps understandable and no doubt symptomatic of the stress he was under. Not
just the annoyance at AS Bari turning a friendly into a war but perhaps also
his frustration at what happened in Milan when the European Cup was lost to
Feyenoord. He returned to Scotland before his team and had a big decision to
make about where his future lay. He could triple his pay at Manchester United
and face the challenges of English football or he could settle at Celtic and
set about rebuilding morale at the club. The Lisbon Lions were beginning to
break up but emerging talents like Macari, Dalglish, Hay and Connolly suggested
he could remould the side and continue his success at Celtic Park. After due
consideration, he told Matt Busby that he had an unfinished job to do at Celtic and was staying in Glasgow.
Season 1970-71 saw Celtic take on the new
Rangers management team of Willie Waddell and Jock Wallace. Celtic blended the
experience of the Lions with the youth of the new boys and swept all before
them. Rangers were defeated by a very young Celtic side at Hampden in the
Glasgow Cup Final in August 1970. The 3-1 score-line flattered Rangers as
youngsters like Quinn, Dalglish, Connelly, Cattenach, Macari and Hay ran them
ragged. Celtic would finish Champions
for the sixth successive year that season with Aberdeen and St Johnstone their
closest challengers. Rangers finished fourth, a huge 15 points behind them, but
given the events at Ibrox in January 1971 it is understandable that they had
their minds on other things. Stein reacted to the Ibrox tragedy with customary
dignity.
Jock Stein led Celtic to the double that
season as he would do again in 1972, 74 and 77. He rebuilt Celtic’s confidence
after the anguish of Milan and helped them reach further European Cup semi-finals
in 1972 and 1974. It is interesting to speculate what might have happened had
Stein accepted Manchester United’s offer in 1970. Sean Fallon would almost
certainly have become Celtic’s manager if Stein hadn’t taken him with him to
Old Trafford. In any case we’ll never know but as Stein proved in the next few
years, he still had the Midas touch and was far from finished. He won a further 8 major honours with Celtic.
His tenure was a golden era for Celtic with spectacular successes at home and
in Europe and his total of 25 major trophies in 12 seasons remains remarkable.
What is more remarkable though was the manner of many of those victories as
Stein’s teams played the game in that quintessentially Celtic way. He knew the Celtic
fans paid good money to be entertained and he made sure his sides did just
that. What’s more the fans adored him not only because he put entertaining and
winning teams on the pitch but also because he fought Celtic’s corner with the
media, the footballing authorities and the Referees.
As the AS Bari coach found out in 1970, you
messed with big Jock at your peril.
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