IN MY long media career, I can honestly say I have never
been on the merry-go-round which is such a part of being a sports
hack in Glasgow – Rangers press conference, Celtic press
conference, Scotland press conference; Rangers game, Celtic game,
Scotland game, and so on and on until retirement.
I have, by and large, avoided having to be nice to both
the bigot brothers and the stumble-bums on the Sixth Floor at
Hampden. However, I have, occasionally, been forced to attend these
gatherings which are such a big part of the life of the Lap Top
Loyal, the Celtic Apologists and the PR battalion of the Tartan Army.
One midweek Ibrox gathering, to announce Rangers' having
Adidas as their kit sponsors, still makes me chuckle. The cream of
Scotland's football writers had queued-up to respectfully discover
the views of Mr (as he then was) Murray, the Rangers' Chairman; each
one carefully addressing him as “Mr Murray” and only just
managing not to tug his forelock as he did so.
Eventually, it was my turn to ask a question: “Davie”
I began; you could hear the mass intake of breath, who was this
usurper, daring to address Mr Chairman by his first name?
In response, David Murray addressed me by my first name,
and, immediately at the end of the press conference, David Murray and
I enjoyed a few moments of conversation, before he left. I was then
collared by one of the pillars of the Scottish Football Writers
Association, who demanded to know what I had been thinking of,
addressing the Rangers' chairman by his first name.
I explained: “Ah kent his faither, Ah've kent Davie
since he was involved in basketball, Ah've aye cried him Davie,
so-what”. That Glaswegian clearly didn't appreciate how we did
things in Ayrshire.
Then there was the summer afternoon at Somerset Park. If
it wasn't Graeme Souness's first domestic game as Rangers' manager,
it was one of the first. Post-match the new Rangers boss emerged from
the dressing room to be confronted by the usual phalanx of football
writers. Mobile phones were still fairly new and brick-size back
then, so, when Souness asked if he could borrow one, he almost did
himself an injury, so keen were the hacks to loan him theirs.
The above tales demonstrate, when it comes to the Old
Firm, by and large the press are right up the clubs' erses; desperate
to be noticed, careful not to offend, almost actively-seeking praise,
recognition and a tit-bit from the Old Firm table. This means,
straight away, objectivity goes out of the window.
I had a long spell of covering the local team for a
local newspaper. We were a one-team paper, as such, we (the paper)
were supporters. But, it was a two-way street, we scratched the
club's back, they scratched ours. And, it was understood, by us and
by the club, from Chairman, directors and Manager down to the
lowliest apprentice, occasionally, we would have to criticise.
In nearly a decade in that job, we had one major
fall-out, which was down to the Editor sticking his oar in where it
wasn't needed. If the Manager, and I worked with five, thought I had
written: “a load of shite” about a game, he was free to say this,
knowing my response would be: “Aye, it was shite, just like your
team's performance”. We never fell out.
OK, I was working with a single team, the hacks in our
national newspapers are supposed to be working with 42 senior clubs,
plus the various national sides and the lesser teams. They are
supposed to treat each club equally, but, as we all know, two teams
are more-important than all the rest put together, which isn't good
for Scottish football, or the Scottish football press.
Right now, the managerial vacancy at Rangers is,
apparently, the only story in Scotland, and, the stenographers (tm.
Phil Mac Giolla Bhain) are falling over themselves not to offend
Rangers in their coverage.
Rangers are in a mess, but, they've been in a mess for
about a decade, since David Murray realised he could not continue to
fund the club as he had been. There have been some (a lot) of stupid
decisions made by the various people who have had charge of the club
since SDM. Some of their signings have defied logic, the whole ethos
of the club is wrong, but, not one hack has stood-up and said this.
Why not? Fear, ignorance, a wish to not rock the boat? I don't know.
Well, one guy has had a go, consistently, and that is
Bill Leckie of the Sun. Bill is a guy I have known for over two
decades, he is a shining star in the firmament of Scottish sports
journalism, and I commend his Monday morning piece on events at
Rangers to the country.
It is a pity a few more of the stenographers (tm.
Phil Mac Giolla Bhain) don't have Bill's balls. And, by the way,
for the avoidance of doubt – BILL LECKIE IS A ST MIRREN FAN,
believe me, he knows what it is like to suffer for your club.
SO, what happens next at Rangers? Your guess is as good
as mine. There is an obvious press campaign to have: “A Real
Rangers Man” installed as the next manager. OK, name me a RRM who
is a good enough manager to take the current lot and bridge that
chasm between them and Celtic?
Even if such a creature existed, remember, he has to do
it with a Chairman who is, according to one of the top judges in
South Africa: “A glib and shameless liar”, an opinion which might
well be endorsed by a top Scottish judge by the time the various
court cases involving the club are resolved.
Whoever comes in, even in a caretaker capacity, will
have to work with the flawed squad he inherits, and, even to get rid
of the obvious failures will cost the club money it clearly does not
have. No manager with even half a brain would touch Rangers just now.
Except, someone will. Somebody desperate for a job,
somebody, maybe a RRM, will have the ego to think: “I can turn this
club around”. Aye Right.
The stenographers (tm. Phil Mac Giolla Bhain),
are busy bigging-up their favourites. The usual suspects – Billy
Davies, Alex McLeish, Derek McInnes are being named. Honestly, I
don't think the stenographers (tm. Phil Mac Giolla Bhain) are
doing these guys a favour.
Rangers are in a mess, indeed, they are in such a mess I
can honestly see them being back in administration before the end of
the season – the situation is that serious.
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