Sunday 19 May 2024

The ghosts of the past

 


The ghosts of the past

As I watched the scenes unfold at Celtic Park yesterday in the aftermath of the final league game of the season, I couldn’t help but feel a familiar wave of nostalgia and history flowing around me. Five generations of my family have followed Celtic through good times and bad and that emerald rectangle on which the players cavorted and celebrated has been their theatre, their happy place and even their second home. The rough and ready terraces of the past may have been replaced by the towering cathedral of football we see today, but the ghosts of the past are strong here.

That spot where Palma slotted home the winning goal, was once occupied by Larsson, Dalglish, Lennox, Tully, McGrory, Gallacher and McCallum. Where I sit in the north stand was once the spot where the old wooden pavilion stood. It was here that Maley, Kelly and Patsy Gallacher got ready for games. It was once the spot where that neck of terracing connecting the Celtic end to the Jungle stood. A space where I’d stand with my old man, brothers and uncle in days long gone. Perhaps we get more nostalgic as we get older, but I can’t help thinking of those folk long gone, on days like yesterday. How they’d marvel at the sights and sounds of the modern Celtic Park; how they’d be overjoyed at Celtic’s on field success in the modern era. How happy they’d be that we still follow the club that meant so much to them.

We’ve come a long way since the days I’d stand outside a pub with the other boys, waiting for our fathers to emerge and take us to see our team. That excitement we felt when we saw the floodlights, heard the songs drifting on the breeze and joined the queues at the turnstiles, has never left many of us. I can recall vividly, half running up the concrete stairs as the game was about to kick off and seeing that emerald rectangle laid out before us, those hooped shirts immaculate and filled with our heroes. We’d live those games, kick every ball, roar at every foul and be totally engrossed in backing our team.

As the match ended yesterday and the workmen built the podium for the players to lift the trophy, I spoke to a dad bringing his boy to his first trophy day. ‘My first was in 1998,’ he told me, ‘never been so nervous in my life.’ I remembered that day well and told him that I still have a piece of Celtic Park turf from that day growing in my garden. His son, who looked about six or seven, listened to us gabbing, before his old man patted him on the head, ‘I wonder how many days like this he’ll see?’  I smiled, thinking, that was me once upon a time. Just a lad setting out on his Celtic supporting journey.

As the trophy was lifted and the ticker tape and confetti filled the air, I roared along with the other sixty thousand fans who had come to cheer their team. Every one of them had a story to tell, a family history where Celtic was handed down to them like a precious heirloom. For others, their journey to Celtic started when they arrived in Scotland from a score of lands and saw Walfrid’s club as their natural destination. That feeling of comradeship, family even, is strong among Celts and it shows no sign of dissipating.

We are, of course, delighted at every Celtic success. Yes, we want a stronger, more competitive game here in Scotland, but that will never detract from the happiness of days like yesterday. When you see guys like Joe Hart, a keeper with 75 caps for England, take Celtic to his heart to the degree where the thought of leaving reduces him to tears, you have to smile. He gets it.

So, the season is almost over with just the Scottish cup final to come. Despite Brendan Rodgers’ remarkable derby record of just 1 defeat in 18 games, he’ll know that every game has its own narrative and that nothing can be taken for granted. One silly red card, one penalty decision can change the whole flow of a match. We remain confident but should avoid arrogance or any feeling of entitlement. Every success has to be earned, to be fought for on the field.

Celtic reached 54 titles this season, just one behind  the combined totals of both avatars of Rangers. Celtic could well overtake their total in the next few years but most understand that most of these records are set in smaller leagues where two or three clubs dominate. So, I doubt any ‘going for 55’ tifos will be arranged, although there will be much humour around. Celtic hasn’t led Rangers in number of titles won for almost a century. In 1997 when Rangers won the last of their nine consecutive titles, Celtic were 12 behind them. It is a measure of Celtic’s dominance since then that they are now just one behind. Those who ‘welcome the chase’ must realise that it is almost over.

As I walked in bright sunshine from Celtic Park yesterday, the happiness of the fans was palpable. There’s a younger generation growing up who have yet to taste anything other than success. You could say the dark days of the 90s were character building for older Celtic fans but in truth they were the fruits of mismanagement by the board in the pre-McCann era. Hopefully that biscuit tin mentality is gone forever and those youngsters will never endure a decade of failure.

As that river of green clad humanity flowed along the Gallowgate, I could picture the old tenements that once stood there in my mind, Terry the Tattoo Artists shop, the old pubs like the General Wolfe and the Four Ways. I could also see my old man’s face; happy that the Celts had done it again. So much has changed as the years drifted past, but as I took in the sights and sounds of happy Celtic supporters, I knew that love they had for their club would endure as it had done since Walfrid’s boys defeated Rangers 136 years before.

A grand old team right enough.



5 comments:

  1. Another wee gem of an article. While it would be nice to win the cup, winning this league was simply magnificent. Given where we were a month ago.

    Hail Hail.

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  2. My family have backed the leather belts since their foundation. I understand exactly what you are saying. Great as always LL

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  3. Fantastic article brought back many happy memories of days gone by HH

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  4. Excellent article, thanks . It brought back many memories too , of my first visit in 67/68 season … a youngster like you met yesterday seemingly a life time gone by .
    Terry the Tatoo artist and General Wolfe … then across the road to the Johnny Thompson cobble stones to pay our respects … ( anyone know what happened to them ?
    I see the Masonic driven media have begun their call to stop any future celebrations by completely castigating the partying last night . They know the Espanyolification of the Dear Green place is almost complete !
    UlyssesGunt

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  5. Really enjoy reading your articles. Thanks.

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