Friday, April 18, 2008

Daily Record panders to moronic RST

If any Celtic supporter is still buying the Daily Record, 18 April 2008 should go down in history as the last day on which money change hands for a rag that intellectually makes the Daily Sport seem like Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations.

Today’s issue features a call from the Rangers Supporters Trust to play the next Rangers match at Celtic Park behind closed doors because of missile throwing incidents in the last match. Let’s be clear - throwing anything at a football game, be it coins or potatoes is reprehensible.

However, this is surely the first time that any supporters group have tried to have sanctions taken against opposition, partly for the actions of their own fans.

In the last match at Ibrox, a missile was thrown at Scott Brown. At Celtic Park, a Rangers supporter threw at least one missile at Barry Robson. Previously, Rangers supporters blamed Stillyan Petrov for being hit by a cup of ice thrown from the Ibrox stands after he had the audacity to celebrate a goal.

If Rangers wish to address crowd trouble, they need look no further than themselves. Already having faced UEFA sanctions for their behaviour, they were extremely fortunate to escape further punishment after some of their supporters made Nazi salutes in Israel.

Earlier this season, the behaviour of Rangers fans appalled the people of Barcelona to such an extent that the British Consul declared himself embarrassed. Terrified that their own fans cannot travel outside Scotland where racism and bigotry targeted at the Irish and Catholics is apparently an acceptable part of cultural life, Rangers have, for the second time been forced to buy up their entire away allocation for the forthcoming UEFA Cup match with Fiorentina.

Despite doing so in the last round, the club, having had the names and addresses of every Rangers fan in the ground, were unable or unwilling to address a racist banner insulting Shunsuke Nakamura and the Japanese. This being a UEFA match, the club could yet be punished for this offence, should any complaint be made – and given the importance of Japan as a market for soccer racist abuse of the country’s best-loved player would be taken extremely seriously.

More recently, Rangers allowed fans to produce a banner at Ibrox insulting the religion of Artur Boruc, again a clear breach of UEFA and SFA guidelines.

And only two days ago, thousands of Rangers fans could be heard indulging in racist taunts against the Irish, singing “the famine’s over, why don’t you go home”. This incidentally was on the same evening that Rangers fans had booed a rendition of You’ll Never Walk Alone, dedicated to the 96 Liverpool fans who lost their lives in the Hillsborough disaster.

As “repeat offenders” any of the former issues in isolation could see Rangers face severe punishment – the pattern of crowd behaviour problems presents a powerful case for the most severe action.

Yet we are invited, by the Daily Record, to believe that Celtic has the greater problem, allowing the content of its pages to be dictated by the Rangers Supporters Trust. It would appear that the talks between Celtic and the Daily Record management over the paper’s slur against Jock Stein were less constructive than first hoped.

The Daily Record clearly wishes only to antagonise Celtic supporters and pander to the element amongst Rangers supporters who can convey their IQ on their fingers, which may or may not be an astute strategy for achieving mass sales.

However, as the paper clearly misses no opportunity to attack the good name of Celtic while either ignoring or blatantly lying about the conduct of Rangers supporters, there can be no justification for Celtic retaining any links with the title.

As for the Rangers Supporters trust, how’s that for an oxymoron?




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Thursday, April 17, 2008

SFA must tackle Rangers racism or answer to UEFA

Not content with racist banners targeting Japanese star, Shunsuke Nakamura, and banners attacking the religion of Artur Boruc, Rangers supporters last night indulged in racist singing against Scotland's Irish community.

The supporters can clearly be heard singing the words: "The famine's over, why don't you go home", a reference to the Irish potato famine that prompted much Irish migration into Scotland and contributed to the foundation of Scotland's Irish community.

The SFA have a clear choice here - treat Scotland's Irish community differently to every other national, racial or ethnic group and ignore the issue or hit Rangers with appropriate sanctions. Should they choose the former, the association itself might well become the subject of a UEFA investigation.

UEFA disciplinary regulations outline various sanctions that may be imposed on "clubs whose supporters insult the human dignity of a person or group of persons by whatever means, including on grounds of colour, race, religion or ethnic origin".

Celtic have recently indicated that they will take a stand against discriminatory attacks on the club's supporters. It is time that action is demanded in response to this abuse of Scotland's Irish community.






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Pride and praise due

Celtic 2 – 1 Rangers
Celtic: Nakamura 20, Vennegoor of Hesselink 90 +4
Rangers: Novo, 55


After what seemed like an interminable wait, Celtic finally became lions when it mattered most, triumphing in what will be remembered as one of the great games between Glasgow’s top sides.

Buoyed by a home crowd hungry for victory and desperate for heroes to establish, even for one night, the rightful order of merit, Celtic’s men tore at Rangers, scornful of the plaudits showered upon the light blues, irked by four consecutive reverses and exuding the courage and craft that has shaped great Celtic sides of old.

Gordon Strachan’s team selection answered every Celtic fan’s prayer – obvious though it may have been to return the men who had responded so strongly to the home disappointment against Motherwell with their stylish, emphatic win. The captain Stephen McManus stepped up to his task, firing his men with rallying shouts.

Even before the kick-off, some Rangers players were gazing around the Celtic Park arena, looking for all the world as if their house had just crash-landed in Oz. Their initial onslaught was unexpected by most, hoping to catch Celtic cold and winning an early corner. Artur Boruc, in the Celtic goal was unperturbed.

But early on Jean-Claude Darcheville, who has enjoyed reasonable success since his move to Ibrox, looked like a man who could think of a hundred places he would rather be.

The sheer impact of the crowd’s audible volume, the loneliness of the amphitheatre where thousands of Rangers supporters became a muted irrelevance and, perhaps, the realisation that being a lone striker on one of Scotland’s biggest pitches was a task last appreciated by Captain Robert Falcon Scott gave the industrious Frenchman the haunted look of a defeated soldier whose only opportunity for salute would be in surrendering his weapons. He did just that before long, preferring to tie his boot lace off the field while his captain took a corner.

In Celtic’s ranks, was a midfield engine that might, given a chance, evoke memories of Bobby Murdoch and Bertie Auld. Certainly, in the absence of Scott Brown, whose multitude of tackles for the Celtic cause saw him suspended, Barry Robson played a role familiar to him – and on another sense stirred memories of many a fine Celtic player of the past.

Once a boy who might have played for Rangers, Robson is now a mature professional blessed with an almost irresistible combination of all-round skill, athleticism, and the accentuated desire that is so often the hallmark of the player whose chance came after it appeared lost. He, more than any other, set the tone for the match – battering Christian Dailly, whose prolonged shrieks to the referee hinted that his fellow Tannadice former pupil had articulated his point in a way that a thousand words could only talk around.

It should be said that the challenge was unfair, according to the rules, but it fired Celtic fans with the belief that this team would fight, as well as containing an acknowledgement that the early physical assertiveness that is so often a hallmark of the Rangers game can, like most things, be done better in green-and-white hoops.

Partnering Robson, was Paul Hartley who has an intuitive understanding of the “late bloomer” footballer psyche and might well have endured status as a Rangers player had Gordon Strachan not offered him salvation. Before long the two were combining their myriad talents, collective years of frustrations and differing early perspectives to form a unit that would rubbish an opposition superior in numbers but blessed with only one exceptional talent in the shape of their captain.

North and south of the central area would be two players diverse in culture and experience but well-matched in rebounding against vile abuse from their antagonists. The hands of Giovanni Trapatonni will have been raised high in praise of Irish international Aiden McGeady’s dissection of Kirk Broadfoot and Steven Whittaker, whose joint attentions served only to prompt Celtic mirth and leave acres of untended pasture for Lee Naylor, who has recaptured much of his verve.

Nakamura had the support of Andreas Hinkel, rich in attacking skill and speed of passing, but the Japanese star was in an ethereal world of his own when he scored one of the great Glasgow derby goals. Picking up a beautiful inside pass from Gary Caldwell 30 yards out, Nakamura’s predatory instincts took him forward before unleashing a strike of such viperous venom and coil that Allan McGregor in the Rangers goal could only move left and look right in horror as the movement of the ball left him stranded.

Wrecking the plans of Walter Smith who had hitherto effectively used ten of his men as a defensive unit, the goal, beautiful as it was, was scant reward for Celtic’s first-half domination.

In the second period, two substitutes would come to the fore. Mark Wilson replaced the injured Naylor with Nacho Novo disappointing home fans, in denying them another 45 minutes of entertainment from Broadfoot. Nevertheless, Novo is one of those nettle-like players who you may not want in your own back yard all the time but who often irritates the neighbours.

Celtic fans know that to utterly dominate a first half and lead by less than two is to prepare for an ill-deserved equaliser. Novo duly obliged, giving Rangers a goal for their eight second-half minutes of inspiration after a full half of perspiration. A foul by Dailly was missed by referee Kenny Clark before Wilson, lacking match sharpness, committed to a tackle and missed, leaving a gap for Novo to exploit and level the scores.

If that single goal was more than Rangers deserved, it almost discouraged Celtic for a few minutes; passes that were too heavy (or too light) resulting in lost possession or extraneous toil.

And then arose Nakamura. A model of composure as the visitors’ heavy defence crowded out Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink and Scott McDonald, the Japanese star had delivered a lesson in control, vision and use of the ball that suggested a man calibrated on a different time continuum from his near neighbours.

But while his colleagues struggled to create opportunities, a shift, a step and a strike from Nakamura looked set to claim this as HIS derby. Cynical cheating and the worst form of bad sportsmanship by Clydesdale Bank’s player of the season saw Carlos Cuellar sent off for using his hand to deny the midfielder.

That advantage should have been enough for Celtic, especially given that Scotland’s top goalscorer would have a penalty against an injured McGregor in the Rangers goal. In truth, McDonald looked to be wary of the task and struck the ball too close to McGregor, prompting fears of another injustice.

The drama had further acts.

McGregor, who had been hurt saving a McDonald shot, decided his race was nearly run but, clearly determined to spend as much of the remaining minutes not playing football, demanded extended treatment on the pitch. In the meantime, January signing Neil Alexander was summoned and dismissed as Walter Smith demonstrated the extent of his faith in the club’s substitute goalkeeper.

Now Rangers wanted only to stop and stand, to play football for as little time as possible, to see time wasted with bickering and spats.

And then the great gamble. Facing ten men and desperate for a goal, Gordon Strachan replaced Robson, the anger of many fans a vocal demonstration of the high esteem in which Robson is already held. But others have been crying out for just such a move – embrace the task in hand with three strikers.

The former group no doubt include those who can see no merit in Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink, a Dutch international who has scored 19 goals this season. Adding Georgios Samaras to the attack at least made one emphatic statement: Strachan is willing to act with courage at the most crucial moments.

The result was salvation: Gary Caldwell, having his best game for Celtic delivered a pass across the field to McDonald whose header back and across goal found Vennegoor of Hesselink at his determined and clinical best.

The match was won, and the tortuous strain on the losers evident in undignified scrapping after the final whistle.

Has life been breathed into Celtic’s challenge? We may have found a pulse.




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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Jock Stein’s secret revealed

Virtute et silentio



As Celtic prepare to face Rangers, The Celts Are Here can exclusively reveal that the man causing so much agitation amongst Rangers fans, the late, great Jock Stein, did indeed have access to certain secrets that can only fuel conspiracy theories in Scottish football.

It has long been suspected by many Celtic supporters that Rangers, the Scottish Football Association and friends in the media share a fraternal bond that is rarely openly discussed.

However, it can now be revealed that the power of this association has extended to Celtic – contributing ten league titles and a European Cup. However, many of those seeking to attack Mr Stein for what he supposedly knew were presumably unaware that Scottish football’s greatest ever manager was in fact a Freemason.

The fact is confirmed by the Grand Masonic Lodge of Scotland on its official website.

The revelation will not perturb Celtic fans unduly – a truly inclusive club which has never implemented discriminatory policies, several Freemasons have donned the hoops to great effect.

Why the Scottish media have to this point largely failed to defend the reputation of their celebrated late brother remains a mystery.



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