Last night as I lay dreaming
Watching Celtic play in the Champions
League over the past decade or so has been akin to watching someone make the
same mistake over and over again. Sloppy goals conceded, the more street wise teams
we have played mugging us and those with more ability praising us for the
atmosphere at Celtic Park before waltzing off with three points in the bag. There
were hard luck stories along the way but in truth 3 wins in 32 Champions league
matches before Wednesday night tells us all we need to know. Celtic has for too
long been failing in Europe’s top club competition and seriously underperforming
when compared to some clubs with less resources than us. Celtic have slipped to
66th place in UEFA’s co-efficient rankings, below clubs such as Bodo
Glimpt. Molde, Tel Aviv and Dynamo Zagreb. All of those clubs, struggle to get
10,000 fans at their league matches.
Something was different on Wednesday
night though. I fully accept that the relatively inexperienced Slovan
Bratislava side was the perfect opponent for us on match day one, but Celtic was
in the mood from the kick off and so too were the fans. The team has been
playing well and continued in that vein against the Slovaks. Part of the
problem Celtic have endured in the Champions League in recent years has been squandering
most of the chances they create. That clinical edge we see from the best sides
was often lacking. This week, the team scored 5 goals and could have had a few
more. They have an attack with real pace and competition in key areas of the
side. The manager is being backed in the transfer market and has added some
quality to the squad. On top of this he seems to be improving individual
players as well as impressing on the side the attitude they need to adopt to be
successful.
The club’s model of developing young
talent and selling them on to the richer leagues has been very successful financially
and Matt O’Riley’s transfer fee covered most of this season’s purchases. In Arne
Engels they look to have secured a young talent who will adequately replace
Matt and who also has boundless potential. In the past we haven’t always
replaced quality with quality like this and the depth of talent and experience
in the squad clearly wasn’t adequate for the challenges of Europe. This season,
the club seems to have got it right. The bench against Slovan Bratislava had
men like Idah, Forrest, Bernardo, Trusty, McCowan, Palma, Ralston and Valle
waiting to come on. That strength in depth will be needed in the depths of
winter when the fixtures come thick and fast.
It was telling that Brendan Rodgers said,
‘this feels like the most-ready I’ve been as a manager. (for the Champions
league) He clearly feels the squad is evolving in the correct manner. As an
elite manager, he has demonstrated again that given the right backing, he can
improve the Celtic team. The players are clearly responding to him and
confidence is high. He handles the media well and knows that the Celtic support
is hungry to make an impression on the park in Europe. It’s no longer enough for
us to hear foreign players to say, ‘what an atmosphere,’ we want them to be
speaking about the Celtic team too.
Nor are the fans content with
staying ahead of Rangers domestically, they want to halt the slide of our
European reputation and have a team to be proud of. We all recognise that the
big leagues with their huge resources will always hoover up the top talent and
our upcoming fixtures in the Champions league will be hugely challenging. No
one expects us to go to Italy or Germany and cuff their multi-talented sides.
We do however expect Celtic to go there and compete. We want their fans talking
about our players and not just our terrific fans.
In 2004-05 season, Celtic was ranked 22nd
in UEFA’s co-efficient. Twenty years on we have dropped 44 places to 66. The
football world has moved on greatly in those twenty years and we recognise that
Martin O’Neill had built a very good side back then. However, O’Neill was
backed with relatively big money to bring in the likes of Hartson, Sutton and
Lennon. He was also a good judge of a player who wouldn’t be fobbed off with
inexpensive ‘projects.’ He knew the side needed quality, experienced
professionals and when he got them, Celtic’s fortunes improved greatly. Celtic
are now in a position of financial strength to back Brendan Rodgers in a similar
way and get Celtic at least competing again with the big boys in Europe. We
have the stadium, the fan base and the financial muscle to develop further and we must.
The banner in section 111 at Wednesday’s
game with Slovan Bratislava contained the words ‘last night as I lay dreaming…’
alongside an image of John Clarke and Billy McNeill with the European cup. We
all know that it is now a dream that a club from a country the size of Scotland
could win the Champions league, but we do dream of building a side that is
respected in Europe again; one that makes visiting Celtic Park a daunting prospect
for any side. Brendan Rodgers said to his young side that they must make Celtic
Park, ‘Paradise for us but hell for the opposition.’ Celtic now have all the pieces in place to
make that come true again.
The first tentative step in the
restoration of our European reputation came in that 5-1 victory over Slovan. It
was the first chink of light after a long dark night in the Champions league
for Celtic. I hope and pray that it isn’t another false dawn. There will be
tough moments ahead but we face the future once more with hope in our hearts.
Here’s hoping the hoops make an impression in Europe this year. About bloody time they did. Great as always LL.
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