WHERE
DO I begin in reviewing Saturday's disgusting scenes at Celtic Park.
I'll begin with a What If?
What if, back
in May, 1967, UEFA had decided that pitch invasion at the National
Stadium in Lisbon had been grounds for taking the European Cup off
Celtic and handing it instead to Inter Milan – might that have
prevented the grandsons of those fans in Lisbon from their
unacceptable behaviour on Saturday?
We
will never know, but, in commenting on Saturday's carnage, we have to
accept, the Celtic support has what is known in legal circles as:
previous –
a
lengthy charge sheet of unacceptable behaviour.
Before
the Celtic apologists pile in with: What
about the other lot? This
is not another chapter in the second oldest game in Scottish Football
– Old Firm Whataboutery – on this occasion, it is the Celtic
Family which is in the dock.
In
writing this blog post I dug up a copy of The
Scottish Professional Football League Rule Book, all
300 pages of it.
Saturday's
game was under the jurisdiction of the SPFL,
so,
it's their rules which apply around the scenes at the end of the
game.
The
first rule to come into play is Rule
G68 – this
calls for:
What
Don
Robertson writes
in that dictates what happens next.
The
events at the end of the game – the pitch invasion and the carnage
which followed are covered by Rules
H28, H29 and
H30
– Unacceptable Conduct.
Any
neutral watching those scenes on television might reasonably
conclude, after reading the relevant rules, that Celtic are guilty of
a breach of Rules
36 and
37.
Consequently,
they are in breach of Rule
38.
It
would then fall to the SFPL to implement Rule
H42 – which
calls for consideration of a Police
Report, the Match Official's Report
and comments
from
Hearts.
It
would then fall to the SPFL Board to decide on any action. They could
adjudicate themselves, or they could form a Commission to look into
the affair. They could perhaps decide:
to
anul the result (Rule J16.4)
Deduct
points (Rule J16.6)
Anul
the match (Rule J16.7)
Withdraw
the title from Celtic (Rule J.16.13)
All
these possibilities – except, this is Celtic we are talking about,
there are only two conclusions we can come to:
Is
there enough whitewash in Scotland to cover everything up?
How
big will the heap be after they've swept it all under the carpet?
Let's
not kid ourselves, the Celtic Support has a long history of
misbehaviour – which they added to yesterday, look at the social
media clips of their behaviour post-game on Saturday, as they
“celebrated” in their time-honoured style in the Trongate in
Glasgow: throwing missiles at the Police and fighting among
themselves.
The
craven club board will shrug and say: “nothing
to do with us”, before
happily accepting their season ticket money and selling them their
club merchandise – and Scotland and Scottish Football's image
around the world suffers.
And
yes I know, if it was the other lot, there would be little or no
difference in the behaviour.
A
line has to be drawn, but, under the current regime at Hampden and
across at Holyrood,
it
aint gonna happen. We simply don't have the leadership with the balls
to do something about this disgrace.
The
league title was affirmation of the managerial genius of Martin
O'Neill, to
take that piss-poor (by Celtic standards) squad to a possible League
and Cup Double is an amazing feat. But, O'Neill will never admit,
they rode their luck along the way, in particular benefitting from a
few Honest
Mistakes from
officials on
VAR duty.
It
is hard not to conclude, this was yet another Tainted
Title.
O'Neill
is unlikely to be in-charge next season, but, whoever succeeds him,
they will need some serious rebuilding if the club is to defend their
crown, far less make an impression in Europe.
FINALLY –
since we are apparently not allowed to mention one cheek of Scottish
Fitba's bigotry and bad behaviour alliance without a nod to the other
– here's my take on this week's other stairheid rammy:
IN
THE Partheon of Great Rangers Captains James Tavernier gets nowhere
near the top shelf. No way does his escutcheon compare to that of the
likes of George Young, John Greig, Jock Shaw, Davie Meiklejohn,
Richard Gough, Sandy Jardine or Eric Caldow.
I
rate Tavernier as a 21st century Bobby Shearer – a
player of limited ability, in many ways lucky to have enjoyed such a
stellar Rangers career. Shearer, however, for all his limitations was
A Real Rangers Man – he
was a Fan on the Park, if he had not been wearing the strip, he would
have been on the terraces cheering-on the club. That can not be said
of Tavernier.
With
reference to Tavernier not getting the send-off he felt he deserved,
I think of Young, for my money the club's Greatest Captain. Young's
final Rangers appearance, the end of a 16-year club career, came in
front of 35,000 fans in a Glasgow
Merchants Charity
Cup semi-final, a 2-0
win over Clyde,
at Ibrox, on 4 May, 1957. Young is not even mentioned in The
Glasgow Herald's match
report on the game.
Young's
last-ever match was in a 2-1
Scotland win over
Switzerland
in a World Cup Qualifier
in Basle,
later that month. He was
then rested from the national team which played World
Champions West Germany, in
Stuttgart, but
was looking forward to bowing out following Scotland's World Cup
Qualifier against Spain,
in Madrid's
Bernabeau.
The
SFA Selectors, however, had other ideas; they didn't recall him for
this game, a decision which caused a minor stooshie at the time but
was quickly forgotten. I reckon the fuss over Tavernier being left
out against Hibs on
Wednesday will no last half as long as did the furore over Young's
omission from the team in Madrid.
Jardine
was quietly allowed to depart to play out his career at Hearts,
Caldow ended his Rangrers career in the Reserves, before being
quietly freed. Shaw was allowed, without fanfare, to retire and join
the club's backroom staff. No big send off for these legends.
Compared
to the Rangers Captains I listed in the opening paragraph, Tavernier
has to be rated as a journeyman of limited ability. Given the state
of British Football today, I would say, had he been any good, a mid
to lower level English Premiership side, or perhaps one of those
yo-yo teams who drift between the bottom half of the Premiership and
the top half of their Championship would have taken him back south
years ago. The fact nobody bid for him demonstrates what an average
talent Tavernier was.
The
fact his non selection and his dummy spitting made such headlines,
also demonstrates how the Scottish media has dumbed down this
century.