Roar Back
Our
cousins in Canada have an adage to help you know what to do in the event of
running into a bear. It goes; ‘If it’s black- roar back, if it’s brown- sit
down, but if it’s white- good night.’ That thought came to me as I considered
Celtic’s demand that Rangers don’t sell any of their allocation of tickets to
the final derby of the season to their own particular band of unruly bears.
When you consider the long and fairly serious list of misdemeanours the Union
Bears have involved themselves in, it seems that Rangers FC are somewhat wary
of taking them on. Consider the ban imposed by Celtic on the Green Brigade
which saw them miss over thirty games this season. Now consider the lack of
action at Ibrox after a long series of incidents involving their ultras.
Following
the scenes at the end of the Scottish Cup tie at Ibrox, which Celtic won on
penalties, many expected Rangers to come done heavily on fans who invaded the
field, assaulted Celtic staff, threw a flare into a crowded stand, assaulted a
police woman, punched a steward in the face and were only prevented from
engaging in serious violence by the thin yellow line of police and stewards.
Why did Rangers’ post-match statement lambast Celtic fans for the dumb vandalising
of the Broomloan stand and completely ignore the far more sinister behaviour of
their own ultras? Could it be they are afraid to take them on?
Celtic
are 100% right to ask Rangers not to issue tickets to the mask wearing element
that causes many of these problems. They are responsible for the health and
safety of everyone coming to Celtic Park for the derby game and point to the
record of this group as a risk factor should they be allowed in. The SPFL
deliberated on the matter and said in a statement issued today…
‘The
Sub-Committee determined that, based on the evidence presented, it would not
overrule a risk assessment carried out by the party legally responsible for the
safety and security of the event, (Celtic FC) or interfere with the mitigation
measures it considered to be necessary to comply with SPFL Rule H36.‘
Rule
H36 states that a reasonable allocation of 5% of a stadium’s capacity should be
offered to away fans. To be clear, Celtic are willing to give Rangers the
stipulated tickets provided they don’t pass any on to the Union Bears. The ball
is now in Rangers court. Their fans’ forums have been full of predictable ‘Tarriers
seeking unfair advantage’ and ‘Celtic run Scottish football’ type of tosh. I
perused a few and not one comment said, ‘you know, the Union Bears have been
out of order.’ How easily they slip on the coat of victimhood they once said
Celtic wore. They need to own the bad behaviour of a section of their fans and
look to change the culture of toxic masculinity that hangs around Ibrox like
the smell from a bust sewage pipe. No problem can be solved until you admit it
exists.
So,
we enter the final act of a season that has been as unpredictable as any in
many a long year. Not since 1983 have we seen three teams in with a realistic
chance of winning the title so late in the day. The relatively poor season by
both of the big Glasgow clubs has allowed Hearts a once in a generation shot at
the title. Last season they finished seventh with just 40 points. This season
they already have 73 points and could conceivably double their points tally of
last year. So, praise where it is due. They’ve improved massively.
Celtic
hit 112 SPFL goals last season and have currently scored 62 with just 4 games
left. That lack of scoring power has greatly impacted on their season. The
inability of the board to sign a proven, reliable goal-scorer is negligent and
their decision to employ Wilfried Nancy was a gamble that failed spectacularly.
His 25% win rate is the worst in Celtic’s managerial history and those 33 days
did huge damage to Celtic’s hopes this season.
Whatever
happens in the final weeks of the season, we all know Celtic will need a major
rebuilding job in the summer. That can wait for now though as the team faces
five games that will define their season. Rangers need to decide if they’ll bow
to Celtic’s demands and not allocate tickets to the Union Bears ultras group.
If they agree, I have no doubt some will slip in and the rest of their fans
will show solidarity by dressing in black and ignoring the rightness of Celtic’s
case. If they refuse, we’ll see two thousand empty seats and may well see the
allocation for Ibrox affected next season.
Perhaps we should paraphrase that Canadian adage about dealing with bears; if
they’re black- roar back. If they’re brown- sit down. If they’re white- good
night. But if they’re louts- keep them out.

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