I watched Celtic dismantle Partick Thistle
this week with a display of sparkling, attacking football any side in Celtic’s
history would have been proud of. This season has been a triumph for Brendan
Rodgers’ side as they have cut through the domestic opposition like a combine
harvester through a field of corn. Now the side are just two matches from
completing an incredible unbeaten domestic season which will guarantee them a
deserved place in Celtic history. Not since Maley’s Celtic side of 1897-98
completed their 18 game league programme undefeated has the club managed this
feat. Even the magnificent Lisbon Lions found a bogey team in 1966-67 to blot
their otherwise unblemished league record; Dundee United defeating them home
and away by a 3-2 margin.
In any senior league, in any country,
completing the season undefeated is a rare and laudable feat. Celtic is not
only closing in on this feat but also on a Scottish points and goals record. In the longer term Scotland’s longest top flight unbeaten run of 62 games
set by Celtic, (20 November 1915 – 21 April 1917) might also come under threat
given the prowess of the current side. That being said, Rodgers is wise enough
to take the ‘one game at a time’
approach and will look no further forward than Sunday’s final league game with
Hearts. That game will be an awesome spectacle to see as a sold out stadium
prepares to party and will create a whole stadium 'tifo' to honour the Lisbon
Lions. The season is entering an exciting and climatic finale. So much is
within reach of this young Celtic side and the supporters are willing them to
jump these last two hurdles and complete the season as ‘Invincibles.’ Few would bet against it.
Of course there are
those who seek to belittle Celtic’s achievements and not just the usual suspects
here at home. I got into conversation with an Irish chap who supports Liverpool
and found that he had sadly succumbed to that old arrogance we have seen for years
from many who follow the English game. The usual ‘My Nan would be top Scorer in Scotland’ nonsense followed, which
was particularly ironic given the chap had dumped any interest in his local
league in Ireland to try to grasp some EPL glory.
It wasn’t always like
this as I recall a Celtic v Manchester City game played in Dublin in 1992.
Celtic supporters made up 95% of the crowd and the English side were well
beaten. Football then was more of a level playing field as satellite TV was in
its infancy and the financial clout of English clubs was not yet drawing in the
best mercenaries in Europe. Celtic was more popular in Ireland in those days than
most English sides as their roots are deep in the soil of that country. The
rise of Sky TV was to change that as a new generation grew up watching English
football packaged and sold very slickly.
Of course, to compare
Scottish football to the billionaire’s playground of the EPL is simply absurd.
England has 53 million people making it almost exactly ten times the population
of Scotland. It also has a deal with satellite TV which brings in literally
billions of pounds. Scotland is the poor relation in financial terms but that
doesn’t mean football here is as poor as some of our more arrogant southern friends
sometimes suggest. Just ask Joey Barton who came up here stating he would be
player of the year and that ‘Scott Brown
isn’t in my league,’ only to be handed his ass on a plate in most games he
played. Not only do I recall him being totally outclassed in the 5-1 drubbing
at Celtic Park last September, but a Hamilton Accies player actually nut-megged
him at Ibrox as his side were lucky to gain a 1-1 draw. He arrived saying he
wanted to be the best player in the country and left saying the Scottish media
had built him up to be ‘like Neymar or
Messi.’ He said in the wake of that 5-1 mauling at Celtic Park…
“After Celtic, I’m having to sit here and take it
on the chin – however unjust I feel that is. It’s difficult when I’m playing at
a level which, clearly, I’ve not played at before. It’s a much lower level and
I’m trying to help people get to a higher level. They think me helping is me
trying to say, ‘You’re not good enough’. It’s difficult."
Personally, I’ve seen
good, bad and average English players in Scottish football. I have never felt
Mr Barton was a particularly gifted footballer and he didn’t stick out as a
good player in a bad Rangers side that day. He looked as mediocre as the rest.
Despite what the critics
say, Scottish clubs have historically punched above their weight in Europe,
reaching 10 European finals. (Rangers 4, Celtic 3, Aberdeen 2, Dundee United 1)
No nation of 5 million or so people can claim such a proud record. Countries of
similar size to Scotland such as Norway, Ireland, Croatia or Denmark all fall
well short of Scotland’s historical record. Celtic was of course the first British club to
become European Champions and have a proud European pedigree which includes
reaching the last 16 of the Champions League on 3 occasions in recent years.
Celtic have held their own with English sides they have met in Europe over the
years having won 7 and drawn 6 of their 20 competitive ties. Some of their
victories over the likes of Leeds United, Liverpool, Manchester United and
Blackburn Rovers have irked some English commentators as many of them share the
conceit that Scottish clubs simply shouldn’t be beating English clubs. When watching
the footage of Celtic’s 2-0 win at Liverpool in 2003, you can still hear the pain
and disappointment in the commentator’s voice as Hartson fired home the
clinching goal.
Of course when you point out Celtic’s
European record to critics of Scottish football they tend to shift focus onto
the comparative strengths of the EPL and SPFL. It’s simply unfair to compare a
league bloated with Sky’s billions and staffed by mercenaries from all over the
world. A recent survey suggested 65% of EPL players are foreigners. For all its
blood and thunder, all its clannish ways and petty hatreds, I like Scottish football.
It’s full of honest endeavour and some of the most knowledgeable and passionate
fans in the world. There is a sterile quality to many English games which
leaves me disinterested and reaching for the off switch.
So on Sunday I’ll be enjoying the party and
celebrating my team’s success. Of course I’d love Scottish football to be more
competitive as this would in turn drive up standards. I’d also like our clubs to be
more successful in Europe but I’ll defend our game against those who run it
down based on nothing more than unthinking prejudice. Folk who have never
attended a Scottish game trot out tired old clichés which demonstrate nothing but
their ignorance.
Football supporters in the small countries of
Europe have watched as the big leagues demand a bigger and bigger cut of the
financial cake. It is up to UEFA to continue to promote and support football all over Europe and not just bow to the mega rich leagues. Like it or not we are never returning to the more equal days of
1967 when a team like Celtic could conquer Europe. We accept that the financial
gulf between teams like Celtic and the mega rich elite European clubs is unbridgeable
but equally money doesn’t win games. It’s eleven players against eleven and as
clubs such as Juventus, AC Milan, Barcelona, Manchester United and Real Madrid
have found at Celtic Park, you write off Celtic at your peril.
Football isn’t just about money; it’s about
that passion for your club, that comradeship with your fellow fans and that
journey which mirrors life with all its triumphs and disasters. Fans in Europe’s
smaller leagues love their clubs with as much passion as any of those in the
big five leagues. That passion still makes little miracles happen now and the
as Barcelona found when they came to Celtic Park in 2012. The late Tito Villanova
said at the time…
The stadium
was spectacular. I have been lucky in my career to have been to many grounds
but I have never seen anything like it.’
Celtic know they are up against it in Europe
but are currently building an exciting young side which promises to give the big
boys a fight. When that incredible support gets behind the team on
those big games under the lights it can be an awesome spectacle. Paul Haywad, writing
in the Telegraph after Celtic beat Barcelona in 2012 summed up the potent
combination which Celtic and their supporters bring to European games at Celtic Park when he said…
‘Somewhere between madness and love, this fanaticism
did for Barcelona on a night when the Celtic team and their disciples were
indivisible. Money can’t buy you that.’
So
tomorrow I’ll delight in our title celebrations. We have much to be proud of
and much to look forward to. I long ago stopped caring about the opinions of
others on Celtic or Scottish Football. If they bring their over hyped sides to
Celtic Park they’ll soon learn that there’s abundant life outside the big
leagues and supporters who put their's to shame.
Enjoy
tomorrow. These are great days to be Celtic supporters.
Brilliant mate ����
ReplyDeleteThank you, we talk our game down too much and allow others to bad mouth it too. It's far from perfect but for a country of 5m we do OK
DeleteGreat piece of writing,it is indeed a great time to be a celt.
ReplyDeleteMon the Hoops!
masterful piece, and as i live in England I know just how it feels when they bring the Scottish game down. I too ignore the rants about our league, my first question to anyone who say's something like that is "do you watch the games?" they for me can push the english league as far as possible It will break maybe not today or tomorrow but it will come down, my heart is Scottish and so is my fitba, Bring them on....... Here's to Celtic hail hail, Glasgow is green and white :-)
ReplyDeleteWell said. As usual. Enjoy tomorrow and then onto next week
ReplyDeleteI really think that the English league is experiencing a financial bubble right now.These things do not end slowly ,nor well for those involved.T.V subscriptions are yesterday's technology. As people watch more on their phones and other devices the money will rush out as fast as it arrived. Wreckage will be widespread and parity returned.
ReplyDeleteHH!
Good article mate!! Hail hail
ReplyDeleteThankyou for sharing this article its really amazing.
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