The glass is
half full
Leaving Celtic Park a little bemused in the late
summer drizzle last night was one of those experiences you have now and then as
a Celtic fan. The team had put up a decent performance against an efficient but
clearly not brilliant Malmo side although the loss of a last gasp goal took the
shine off a gutsy Celtic display. Those opening ten minutes were the stuff of
dreams and you have to wonder how things would have finished had Johansen
buried that excellent chance and made it 3-0. The good play up to that point
was undone in the end by the sort of careless defending which is usually
punished at this level although Van Dijk was clearly fouled at the second goal.
Yet the support trudging along the Gallowgate felt a curious mixture of
disappointment at the last gasp goal by Berget and some pride that the team are
progressing at this level. One only has to think back 12 months to the tame and
rather worrying capitulation to Legia Warsaw. That second leg match at
Murrayfield was as poor as I’ve seen Celtic in recent years.
Old hands of course stated that you simply
cannot defend as Celtic did last night in European football and expect to
progress and that is true. Whoever is pitched into the back 4 in Sweden had
better ensure an error free 90 minutes if Celtic are to progress. But there
were a lot of positives to be taken from last night’s performance too. Middle
to front Celtic look a mobile and capable side. Biton, Brown and Johansen were at times very
effective and James Forrest had one of his better games. Gary MacKay Steven
looks comfortable at this level and Griffiths also looked sharp, determined and
dangerous. He is starting to look like a Celtic striker and seems to have
matured since his arrival at Celtic Park. On the down side, Lustig’s injury was
cruel on a player who has been through much already and those lapses at the
back seen to haunt a team which has conceded 2 goals to each of their opponents
(Malmo, Kilmarnock and Inverness) in the last three games. There was enough in
Celtic’s play and Malmo’s lack of real top level class to suggest that this tie
is far from over.
There seems to be more optimism online today
than was the case last night when one fan commented that Celtic ‘We have champs league fans with Ryman league players.’ Such comments are of course born of frustration
but are nonetheless unfair. Celtic’s
players put everything they had into last night’s game and actually beat the
Swedish Champions. Had that been a group game we would have gone home
celebrating 3 deserved points and our jaundiced, negative press would have had
to accept it was a deserved win. It is easy to criticise individual players for
errors in games but given the relatively poor state of Scottish Football’s
revenue streams, Celtic actually punch above their weight in Europe. They
single handedly hold up the Scottish coefficient which would sink to the level
of Luxembourg without them. There is a difficulty enticing good players to
Scotland and those who do come may well do so with one eye on the English Premiership
and the riches it holds. Of course fans are entitled to criticise the team if
it underperforms but such criticism must always be tempered by the realisation
that the club is operating in a very different world to the one where the
Lisbon Lions thrived and sent a shiver down the backs of the opposition.
Celtic are simply not
operating in the more equal times of the 1960s or 70s any more when the big
clubs in Europe were turning over 3 or 4 times Celtic’s annual revenue. Figures
for 2013-14 show that Real Madrid had reached an annual turnover in excess of
half a billion Euros as did Manchester United. That is 8 or 9 times Celtic’s
annual revenue. Of course, few expect us to compete with such financially
bloated clubs and that is why for many just reaching the UCL group stages
remains the Holy Grail. Qualification can boost Celtic’s annual turnover by as
much as 30% as well as giving the club and its wonderful supporters’ exposure
to a much wider European and world audience. We are where we are financially
and any class players we have will always be coveted by the clubs of the rich
leagues who it seems have cash to burn these days. It did not go unnoticed that
Bristol City recently offered Crystal Palace £9m for a player. This is a club
with an average attendance of around 12,000. That is what Celtic are up
against.
In a sense this is the real frustration for
Celtic supporters. We know that our world-wide fan base and profile would make
us a force to be reckoned with if we could access the sort of TV revenues on
offer in leagues like the EPL where Arsenal received £149m last season. Until
such an eventuality occurs, and it currently seems a distant dream, Celtic
desperately need to qualify for club football’s greatest competition. That is
why it is vital that Celtic go to Malmo next week, be brave and give it a real
go. For a club like Celtic which aspires to be among the best, the rewards of
Champions League football are more than just financial. It offers their
wonderful band of supporters the drama, glamour and excitement they crave and
deserve. It also shows our fans on television throughout Europe as being among
the loudest, most sporting and knowledgeable around.
I wouldn’t blame Ronny Deila if he rested
half a dozen first team players at Tannadice this weekend. There will be time enough
to deal with the SPFL in the future
whereas we now have just one chance, one shot at glory and we must try to take
it. As one fan said to me in the Glasgow drizzle last night, ‘We are 90 minutes from the Champions League
and we begin the game with a goal of a start.’ There is no greater
incentive than that. So go to Sweden Celtic and give it 100%. Whatever happens
we’ll be with you all the way just as we have been for last 127 years. It’s
been an incredible journey and we hope there are many more high points to come.
Getting a result in Sweden next week would
get us a seat at the top table of European club football again and despite our
relative lack of financial clout, that is where we belong. As one of life’s
optimists, especially when it comes to Celtic, the glass is always half full
and not half empty.
I really believe that despite the challenges
ahead we can do this. Time will tell.
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