Sort it out
Watching Celtic stumble to another defeat in
Europe this week wasn’t as traumatic as one would expect. Roma was quite
obviously the better side but we do tend to help such teams by some chronic
defending. Fans around me in the north stand were of the opinion that the team
is in transition and Europe is something of a bridge too far this season. One
even suggested that, painful as it was, the failure to beat Kairat Almaty in
the Champions League play off might have been a blessing in disguise as it probably
saved us from watching the team take some even more comprehensive beatings. Although
we would have faced the likes of Real Madrid, Inter Milan, Arsenal and Sporting
CP, I tend to think you take your chances and the money going in the UCL and
give it your best shot.
Some of the fans around me were more concerned
with domestic matters this season and continuing an almost unparallelled period
of domestic domination. One remarked, ‘with our injury list and the way we’ve
been playing, it’s some going to be just 3 points behind Hearts.’ Personally, I
still think Hearts will be coming down with the Christmas decorations and will
finish third this season but I’ve been wrong before. Having said that, they’ll
never have a better opportunity of catching both the big Glasgow clubs in such mediocre
form and ending a 40 year wait for someone out-with the Glasgow duopoly winning
the title. I simply can’t see Celtic being so disjointed for the rest of the
season and remain confident the Hoops will be there when the finishing line
approaches in May.
Wilfried Nancy has had something of a baptism of
fire in the Celtic hot seat. We praised Martin O’Neill for coming through a
very demanding week of St Mirren (away) Feyenoord (away) and Hibs (Away) and
winning all three games. Nancy had Hearts and Roma at Celtic Park for starters and
chose to tinker with the team’s shape for those important games. Hearts fans
were obviously delighted to win the match but in retrospect only poor finishing
from Maeda and Engels stopped Celtic from taking something from the game. Talk by
some media pundits of Hearts ‘schooling’ Celtic was simply nonsense. They have
clearly improved under McInnes and are a dangerous side, but they rode their
luck against a Celtic side playing well below par.
Nancy now faces that rugged and physical St
Mirren side in the League Cup Final on Sunday. The Saints will only be
encouraged by Celtic’s form but the bigger pitch at Hampden will make it more
difficult for them to deny Celtic space. They will have had 8 days to prepare
for the cup final, having not kicked a ball since they beat Dundee United 2-0 a
week ago. They will be fresh and have had ample time to practice their game
plan so Celtic are going to have to earn it the hard way on Sunday. The last
three games between the clubs have been very close so Celtic will need to step
up and play. There’s a lot riding on the result of Sunday’s league cup final.
Wilfried Nancy needs to convince the fans he is the right man to develop
Celtic. The Celtic hierarchy need a positive result to lighten the mood around
them and the club. The team needs the confidence boost being winners will give
them and reignite their season. There is no room for hiding or empty shirts on cup
final day.
The Celtic fans will play their part at Hampden
as they always do. Most of us wish the support was united and in harmony with
the club but as you all know there are factions who seem distracted by the
ongoing dispute with the board. I’m not sure to what extent the wider support is
behind them on this. We all realise the board made a complete hash of the
summer transfer window and have allowed players in key positions to leave
without adequate replacements being brought in. They failed to communicate
adequately with the fans just what was going on and when the deal for the long
sought after striker, Kasper Dolberg, collapsed and he joined Ajax, it led to a
desperate scramble to bring in players in the dying days of the transfer
window. It was obvious the squad started the season weaker, especially in
forward areas, and when the injuries piled up, form tailed off.
The 56,188 fans who paid to watch Celtic take on
Roma this week are no fools. They can see that the side who took Bayern Munich
all the way in the Champions League last season has been stripped of players
who contributed over 50 goals that season (Kuhn, Idah & Kyogo) and that
they weren’t replaced with like for like quality. We know the Scottish league
isn’t an easy place to entice good players to come too, but the club has the
finances to attract certain targets and let them know that in time they’d let
them go should a bigger league come calling. Fans were right to express
disquiet at the decline in the standard of the team and the lack of
communication from the board to explain just what was going on.
The march of supporters from St Mary’s church to
the stadium for the Hearts game attracted a decent crowd and there were banners
displayed at the stadium protesting the board’s failings. Any parallels drawn
between the situation now and what occurred in the early 1990s are facile and
wide of the mark. Celtic was facing insolvency in 1993-94, the stadium was
crumbling and the team ill equipped to take on free spending Rangers. Today the
side is dominant, finances strong and only the perceived poor performance in
identifying and signing good players to strengthen the side is holding Celtic
back on the field.
Off the field, the ongoing dispute with sections
of the support rumbles on. The Celtic Collective, an umbrella title used to represent
a considerable number of fans has raised concerns about board incompetence, the
banning of the Green Brigade, dropping standards on the field, a poor match day
experience, ticketing prices, the ageing stadium and poor communication with
fans. There may be some truth in all of this, but there are those who point to
42 trophies won in 25 years, a healthy financial position and a board duty
bound to respond to local authority safety guidelines on behaviour in football
grounds. My take on this is that the fans are nowhere near as united behind the
‘rebels’ as they were in the 1990s when the old board almost led Celtic into
administration. There are many who see faults on both sides and wish they’d
sort things out and we can get back to being a united support, focusing on
backing our team for 90 minutes and not being distracted by off field issues. As
Henry Ford said… ‘Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress;
working together is success.’ We all want the same thing so sit down and sort
it out and let’s get back to helping our club be all it can be.
Disunited we can do so little; united we can do so
much.


Never a truer statement made sack the board .They are not Celtic fans end of .
ReplyDeleteWhat the hell are they then
DeleteCompletely agree with all of your opinions in this article and a well written summary of the issues facing our club. The only way to solve all these issues is by sitting round a table and discussing them all in great depth, HH. Tam Kerr
ReplyDeleteCheers Tam. We have a real tendency to shoot ourselves in the foot at Celtic. Hopefully folk get talking again because if the GB are still banned when the season ends, the club might be tempted to sell their STs to others. That would make the situation worse. Even if the board did go, who replaces them?
DeleteWell it's clear your on the side of the board,is your real name lawell
ReplyDeleteI try to give a balanced account of what is going on. Where in that article do you see my support for the board? I just laid out the facts as I see them.
DeleteThat's some take on the above article. You and your self important wee mates can't handle anyone telling it like it is. You have as much chance of shifting this board as I have of shitting a fridge.
ReplyDeleteWell said totally agree as it pulling us apart.Feel sorry for kids going to their first Celtic match with no Green Brigade etc enhancing their experience which i witnessed last week at the Hearts game travelling from Ireland.Think the board has to really take the lead as they owe us a apology for the fiasco at the GM.DD has been great for us but his son Ross needs to lead the way with a heartfelt apology for that obnoxious statement at the GM.
ReplyDeleteReally coming together ?
ReplyDeleteThe fans want that the board doesn't,how hard is this to understand or in some cases realis
Surely the 'fans' should have behaved better at the AGM? Shouting and swearing like neds hardly makes the board want to invite them around for tea. Both sides need to grow the fuck up & stop posturing.
DeleteI am old enough to have lived thru the early nineties and even then there were people who couldn't see past the old board and if we had listened to them we would not be here, it is the same today we have a shareholder who is not even a majority shareholder interfering in the daily running of the club for his own benefit note the size of his dividends and is being aided by a gutless board who won't do there jobs and tell him to keep his nose out , this same board won't even confront the SFa, Police Scotland or anyone for that matter but continues to to pillory its own support reference PL attitude at AGM and treats them like second class citizens they have forgotten who pays their inflated wages for doing nothing as DD runs everything, and if you think it will be hard to replace these guys you are very much mistaken.
ReplyDeleteCeltic FC is currently valued between £450 million to £500 million. This valuation takes into account the club's assets, including players, coaching staff, stadium, training facilities, and a healthy bank balance, making it an attractive proposition for potential buyers. Who, apart from big business, has that sort of cash? Be careful what you wish for.
DeleteCompletely agree with Auldheid
ReplyDeleteThink it's a valid point about not everyone agreeing with the Celtic fans collective, although it's more nuanced than agree/disagree. Some of the rhetoric coming out from the group is hijacking it's main purpose & more in line with personal agendas or views, which will alienate people & weaken the objective. I also think there's very similar parallels with current situation & 1990's, bearing in mind 12-15k were still attending games, which with reduced attendance was the reason we were facing financial implosion & points to a support split. However the biggest similarity is in the manner the clubs ran, a defacto board who's accountable to no one. For me the biggest difference amongst the support is those who see domestic success as fufilling, who are happy with those achievements & others who think given the financial disparity in Scotland, it's like shooting fish in a barrel. I'll be honest, I wish I was the former, those guys seem to be happier😂
ReplyDeleteFirst rate summary. I remember the Kelly’s/ White days, this is different. The Board totally mismanaged this year’s transfer windows. I don’t doubt the hours they put in but they are well paid to get it right and they did not.
ReplyDelete‘ Sack the Board! is a nonsense, they are not employees and can not be sacked. Nicholson and Tisdale can. Only the shareholders can force Board members to stand down through a vote and one shareholder has rather more shares than me! Hopefully he will see that he needs to make changes. We should back our manager for longer than a few matches. Utrecht is the crucial European tie for us but tomorrow’s Cup Final, unlike Hearts, is a one off.
i agree the answer lies in getting round the table and discussing things in a grown up fashion but how do you drag the board to the table when they clearly consider themselves so far above us peasants they will not consider that possibility.
ReplyDelete