Celtic fans have rightly sneered in recent times at the increasingly crude media management employed by David Murray and his Media House cronies, using second-rate Play-Doh hacks to deflect attention from the behaviour of Rangers fans.
Celtic have been much more subtle. Peter Lawell, for example, is a much more shrewd operator than Murray (and could teach him a thing or two about dignity). But that’s not to say that certain figures at Celtic have made less strenuous efforts to spin their way out of the public eye when the club’s failings have been concerned.
And chief victim of this is Gordon Strachan. Has Strachan made mistakes? Is he often too reluctant to make attacking changes? Could he sometimes be described as too much a coach and not enough of an old-fashioned manager? Undoubtedly.
Has he been a Chief Executive’s dream? You betcha!
Let’s be clear about one thing – Celtic, above the coaching level, did not plan for the last 16 of this season’s Champions League. The club calculated for a lucrative UEFA Cup run and championship-winning season.
They watched a pitiful Rangers side clump to a final in Manchester and said: “We’ll have some of that.”
How do we know this? Because Celtic’s unofficial channels that explain away policies before they have even become official told us so before a ball was kicked in anger. When the club was crying out for the left back and striker the fans expected, suddenly the focus turned to “cash in the bank”, and “financial consolidation” keeping us ahead of our domestic rivals for the foreseeable future. It was then that speculation turned to the benefits of a UEFA Cup run in comparison to one more round in the Champions League against a club we had little hope of beating. This does not happen by accident.
Well, when you aim for second best, you very often end up with nothing.
Now, however, the same “insiders” are telling us that, whatever else may be wrong at Celtic, lack of investment in the team isn’t one of them. “Net spend” is relatively high, we hear. The implication is clear – Peter Lawwell, Dermot Demond and John Reid aren’t to blame; Gordon Strachan is.
It is a shoddy way to treat a manager who has continually delivered success under extreme financial constraints and sung the praises of his “friends” at the club in the process.
Did Strachan, who maintains the most detailed database of players, say he didn’t want another left-back, additional top quality central defender and proven goalscorer? If he did, he should come out and say so. If instead he was forced to accept that sufficient funds would be unavailable, those who made that decision should be held accountable.
Strachan still has and always will have fans who compare him unfavourably to Martin O’Neill. How would he have reacted to this?
I suspect that he would have publicly embarrassed the officials who were failing to support him. I doubt that he would have quietly acquiesced while players like Du Wei were foisted upon him to “appeal to the Chinese market”. I wonder if he would have sat back while players like Marc Crosas (admittedly a good addition) were delivered in deals that were conducted in the board room without the coaching staff being asked for an opinion.
You can be certain that O’Neill would have raised the roof if he suspected that private briefings were being issued to have the blame laid entirely at his door while those who frustrated his attempts to improve the squad were exonerated.
I suspect that this will be Gordon Strachan’s last season at Celtic, though I hope I am wrong. If that is the plan, then some figures at Celtic may think they have little to lose in feeding him to the piranhas to enable them to hide.
It is true that some fans judge ambition only on the size of the transfer fee paid for “wow signings”. It also appears that, whatever the financial climate, some of the recent calls for prudence would have been more appropriate to the last Chancellor of the Exchequer than the former Home Secretary. There is a middle ground – sign better players than you have and build the squad you need.
Notably, Celtic’s own website has only two news items on the exit from Europe. The names Reid, Lawwell and Desmond are not mentioned. They should not, however, believe that underhand tactics will fool all of the people all of the time.
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5 comments:
well put fella.
i'not wgs biggest fan but i do get the sense that he is a decent enough man.
those on the board should be held to account, of course this is difficult for fans to do, but the board WILL take notice as the empty seats grow at the home games because of the poor show on offer... if they understand anything its $$$...
i just cant stand the way the board 'play' the celtic fans, feeding us the line of how great we are at every opp. whilst overseeing the team go backwards... they cannot, of course tell us the truth that they only plan for europes second tier but that is clearly the extent of their vision for the club. they should just stop pretending otherwise.
you ask yourself, how many in the present squad would get in a mon team ?
boruc for sure, but who else?
i was at the man u game at old trafford, i cant remember being so sick at watching the celts (until the other night that is).
we all know we cant compete with man u/ chelsea and so on, but we can do an awful lot better than we are now, we are a very poor team.
no quality, little craft, no excuses about own goals... the writing was on the wall at the first hun game. surely we should expect a celtic team to at least compete with the top teams! john d
Different quality the champions league. Gordon you need to spend some money or you will become laughing stock producing negative performances like that on tuesday. Samaras was not fit, Maloney would of been a better option.As for sheridan you cant tell me he can play at this level. Times up for Naka, we need young players who want to play for the badge. Bring in Brendan Rodgers who has recently became Watford manager. He has worked under mourinho at chelsea, also hes Irish and has great contacts and could get decent players on loan.
what a breath of fresh air, of course its the boards fault it always is when funds are not made available ....strachan is great....can you imagine strachan with top top players
I'm sorry folks but some of you must have some incredibly short memories.
The great Martin O'Neill teams who we currently can't hold a candle to that you are referring to are the same ones who didn't get to the last 16 once yeah? The ones who tossed away the league too? On Tuesday we didn't take our chances and made mistakes late on, make us a bad team this does not.
Also how will buying strikers and midfielders help when you have lost arguably your most effective European striker (JVoH) and most direct attacking threat (AMcG) to injury.
We have had a poor season, made silly mistakes but we are looking like cruising the league again and can have another crack at the big show next year.
Many people commented we needed at least another striker at the start of the season and that proved to be the case.
Three established strikers is not enough for a team competing at a high level in Europe and going through domestic competition. Yes, it was bad luck that Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink got injured and that Georgios Samaras clearly hasn't recovered his form. However, we were light on the squad and it cost us dearly.
We also clearly have needed a left-back for more than a season. Mark Wilson can't be blamed for not being a world-beater on the wrong side of the pitch when he too has had his injury problems.
However, everyone could identify this weakness long before Tuesday night.
The midfield, in my opinion, is down to nothing more than bad luck - we need a lot of players in there to cope with the demands of a season. We have enough good players there but nobody could have predicted that we would have so many out hurt.
John Parks has a record of uncovering new talent that most British clubs would envy. Are we to believe that he and Gordon Strachan haven't identified players between them? Or is it the case that Strachan is being expected to compensate for the lingering Bobo Balde?
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