Back the team
Like most of you reading this, I’ve invested a
lot of time, money and emotion into supporting Celtic over the years. I’ve seen
some great days and I’ve seen days when success seemed far off. In the early
1990s Celtic had in place a board which lacked the financial acumen and clout
to drag Celtic into the modern era. In those times, fans’ discontent was
discussed in fanzines which developed in response the rather insipid club
newspaper which tended to not publish letters critical of the board. The Celtic
View came to be sarcastically nicknamed ‘Pravda,’ the Russian word for ‘truth.’
It was most famously known as the name of the official newspaper of the Communist
Party of the old USSR. It acted as the government's mouthpiece for decades and
even the Russian people knew it was full of propaganda.
Debate and protest in those pre-social media days
had to be done in a more up close and personal way. Fans debated on the buses
to games, they talked on the terraces and if they wanted to organise, then
leaflets were handed out around the ground and articles sent to the fanzines. In
such ways, public meetings could be set up and this was a particularly
effective weapon in the Celts for Change days of the early 90s. The context of
a failing team, a stadium in dire need of rebuilding and a board who were
almost bankrupt of both money and ideas, lent the protests of those days a real
sense of urgency. The club we loved was failing and in very real danger of
administration with all the problems and humiliations that would come with
that. The ordinary Celtic fan, for so long thought of as useful idiots by the old
board organised in a remarkable way to save the soul of their football club.
If we fast forward thirty years, we see a club
which has built tremendous domestic success on the platform those supporters of
thirty years ago provided. Tens of thousands of fans bought shares in Celtic
and rebuilt the stadium and the team. Each year tens of thousands of them buy
season tickets and merchandise which helps make a club, almost bankrupt in 1994,
the wealthiest in the land by some distance. But Celtic is more than a
business, more than a way of making wealthy shareholders a tidy dividend. It is,
as Bob Kelly once said, for many people a way of life. All of us fans want the
very best for our club. Yes, we’ve racked up 42 domestic trophies in the 21st
century and that is all well and good. But we look with frustration at clubs of
similar size to Celtic and a good few smaller than us who achieve more in
Europe than we do.
Last season we made a real go of it in the
toughest club competition in the world. We took Bayern Munich, a club whose
turnover was over a billion Euros last year, to within 60 seconds of extra time
in the Champions League. We really thought we were a couple of good signings
away from making the club we love a force in Europe again. That old Celtic
habit of not building on a position of strength reared its head again and we
allowed some of the key components of the side to leave without adequately
replacing them. The appalling handling of the summer transfer window, coupled
with the team losing to Kairat Almaty in the Champions League play-off round
saw the hopes we had after last season turn to ashes in our hands. The majority
of fans were rightly angry at the board for mishandling things so badly and allowing
the team to regress. It’s important the club is well run and financially sound,
but for the fans, all of that is designed to give the manager the players he
needs to move the club forward. It seemed to betray a real lack of ambition and
vision on behalf of those running the club. To sit on £70m of cash reserves and
watch as the team went backwards was in the eyes of many ordinary fans
inexplicable and unforgivable.
Modern social media has made organising protests
far easier for today’s supporters than it was for their fathers 30 years ago. Facebook
and X can reach thousands of supporters easily and various podcasts and blogs
are accessible to all. You can even order 1000 personalised posters on Amazon
for under £100. It is also easier for fans to disagree with each other as was
proven again today following the announcement of a proposed ‘3 match package of
silences’ organised by a group calling itself ‘Celtic Fans Collective.’ Most
see nothing wrong in their objective of making the Celtic board communicate
better with the fans but I honestly struggled to find a comment which supported
the idea of sitting in silence for parts of the 3 games mentioned.
Much as we are fairly united on the need for
transparent, open and communicative running of our club, most fans are not in
agreement with doing anything which might hinder the team. We go to the match
to back our side, to cheer, to moan, to kick every ball with them. That’s part
of being a Celtic fan. Trying to get at the board by sitting in silence is like
trying to stop the sun rising by closing your eyes. It’ll achieve nothing and
may be counter-productive to the team on the pitch. That is something, I for one
would not countenance. We see how an increasingly toxic atmosphere at Ibrox is affecting that particular team and do not want to start down that road. Celtic
Park is famous for its atmosphere on European nights. The idea of us sitting in
silence for half an hour in the match with Braga next week is simply
ridiculous. The dispute is with the board and those with a point to make should
adopt tactics which make them sit up and take notice, not offer a helping hand
to opponents by turning the stadium into a library.
A better man than me once said, ‘Football without
the fans is nothing.’ I hope our board realise that and work to give the Celtic
fans the best possible team they can and communicate with fans in a less
patronising manner. Former Dundee United boss, Jim McLean said many years ago, ‘with
supporters like these, how can you fail to become champions? They are just
incredible. I give Celtic credit for playing really well and beating us but
these fans look as though they are part of the team.’ When Celtic and their
fans are united like that, they are a potent force indeed.
I respect the right of any fan to express their
displeasure at the board. We care so much about our club and want it to be all
it can be, but I suspect that the majority at Celtic Park for the visit of Hibs
will be making plenty of noise. This isn’t the 1990s. We aren’t backing a
failing team and a clueless board. Domestically we are in the midst of one of
the most successful periods in Celtic’s long and unbroken history. Yes, the
board made a complete hash of the summer transfer window and fans have every
right to be angry about that but that shouldn’t stop them backing the team with
all the fervour they’re famous for.
The cry in the 90s may have been, ‘sack the
board,’ but it was also ‘back the team.’ I suspect the majority at Celtic’s
next few games will be doing just that.
Could not agree more with you! I also remember what we went through with the old board. We need to back our team like we always do!
ReplyDeleteLook what Liverpool spent on just 2 forward players over 230 million. Has it made them any better? You don’t always have to spend millions to have a good team! We also don’t have a God given right to win everything! If we went out and just spent millions to spend? Then the same people would be crying that we aren’t bringing through our own homegrown. Fact! I will finish with, how bout that Colby Donovan! 💪🏻
Hail Hail
I notice you didn't mention the fans that were booing the bunnet when he saved the club from bankruptcy. You don't really dwell on that fact. I obviously was there. You are more than welcome to your opinion. We shall see between you's who sings the loudest.
ReplyDeleteNobody booed him when he saved the club from bankruptcy, it was 4 years later when he was trashed by the shitty press in Scotland and some believed what they wrote. I'm not really sure what that's got to do with what LL wrote here? I'll be backing my team, as the guy says you're free to do what you want.
DeleteIt wasn’t that either, it was for not doing more to keep Jensen after he stopped old Rangers reaching 10.
DeleteWin Jansen had a get out clause in his contract and the main dispute he had was with Jock Brown. That game against Dunfermline saw a lot of 'stand up if you hate Jock Brown' chants. I recall Murdo MacLeod and Jansen were cheered as they sat in the stand. Typical Celtic, get into a good position & feck it up.
DeleteHe got booed for not splashing cash. Jansen wanted to leave. Same old same old.
DeleteThere’s a strange parallel here with Reform and the bin burners outside immigrants’ hotels. A noisy minority get all the press coverage.
I’m not an advocate of giving the team the silent treatment for the whole match but continuing the 12th man theme, why not for the first 12 mins followed by a load roar, and as for Liverpool, they or any other team would never fail to replace a striker, a left back and a right winger, in fact they would already have replaced them before they were sold and if the board had replaced Kyogo they would’ve been able to sell Maeda instead of keeping an unhappy player. HH
ReplyDeleteI sat with mr Lawell and had a brief chat with him talking Celtic of course. The chat was Celtic in Europe he doesn’t think we are a champions league team we are a Europa league team that’s as far as we can get that chat alone about ten years back led me to not buying Celtic merch as I thought it was my only way to hurt them I know it sounds silly I’m a on a one man boycott of Celtic merch but I’ll continue to do so until Mr Lawell is gone we as a club should be doing everything to be in the top league every year so I’ll continue my boycott Hail Hail back the team sack the board
ReplyDeleteCanny argue with any of that, back the team & sack the board.
ReplyDelete“Sack the Board”. Why? Apart from mindlessly regurgitating something you heard someone else say.
DeleteMajority of fans making a noise at the next few games ? Don’t think so , Celtic Park would be like a library if it wasn’t for the 2 ultras groups. The only time the fans waken up is when we score, play the huns or the start of a European game. I’m all for protesting against these leeches and charlatans that run our club but I don’t think the silent one will do any good because of what I’ve said previously .
ReplyDeleteThere's a difference between making a noise and singing. The Ultra groups are great at getting things going but the support will roar and shout at chances, goals & fouls as usual. Sitting in total silence will not happen. Such a poor choice of tactics to use in the circumstances. Back the team- hit the board in the pocket.
ReplyDeleteThis is the most constructive comment I have read for weeks. Someone who sees sense and writes well.
ReplyDeleteThe so called protest organisers have continually failed to put their heads above the parapet and show who is actually behind these protests.
I dont agree with what the board have done, im no happy clapper, I am a true supporter for over 60 years who will also support the team and manager through and through
I have to agree m8, the self appointed, annonymous 'fans spokespersons' represent no one but themselves. fans of other clubs must think we're self entitled prats. Sure, the board fucked it up in the summer but we've screwed up in life. Get over it and back the team.
DeleteFinally someone talking sense. The same muppets that heckled Fergus when he was raising the flag that stopped the Hun 10-in-a-row are now chanting ’sack the board’. As if any of them don’t screw up at their own jobs! Fergus’ final word was a warning against ever getting the club into a position of financial vulnerability ever again. The team we fielded should have been able to get through that qualifying round. The manager and the team let us down. But typical misplaced indignation leads to stupid tub thumping led by even more stupid bloggers.
ReplyDelete