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Celtic Diary Sunday August 11

Amido Balde gave Celtic a deserved 1-0 win over Liverpool in dublin yesterday in what was a nice wee run out for the reserves. And he played well, which might mean he isn’t as bad as the doomsayers reckon after all.

The English side did have much of the play, but were somewhat toothless up front without Luis Suarez .

Right, got that joke in. On to the serious issues.

Now that European football is guaranteed until Christmas at least, the task of strengthening the side-not the squad-needs to be undertaken urgently and with relish.

Manager Neil Lennon said;

Theres no new players coming in at the moment but I’m hoping something might develop over the weekend, kelvin has now gone and we’re a wee bit bare on numbers. We want to add to that in the next few days as the Euro deadline is on Monday. We’ve been linked with a lot of players and this window is the most remarkable I can remember. I’m not here to talk about speculation. ”

Well, I am.

Lennon called the link with Italian wonderkid Manuel Capuano “speculation ” , he referred to the Kevin Doyle rumours much more specifically;

” We tried to get Doyle in January, but that was then and this is now. ”

So, its not Doyle then, which will come as a relief to everyone except Doyle. That means it must be Alfred Finnbogasson. See how easy it is to work out whats going on ?

Finnbogasson will apparently be watched by no fewer than fifteen scouts when he turns out for Iceland against the Faroe Isles next week, so if Celtic are to make a move, they’d better be doing it even as I type this.

Ten players have already left Celtic, and apart from the odd loan deal here and there, that should be it now, so its time to supplement what has stayed.

The Iceman scored in stoppage time for Heerenveen yesterday, and the Herald reckons that they want just £3.5m for the forward.  Lennon hasn’t publicly said that he wants him in, but speculaltion has it that he’s the main target.

So, just get it done.

Worryingly , though, Southamptons Billy Sharp has spoken about a possible move to Celtic;

“Celtic is a massive club and attracts huge crowds,” he said, obviously having done his homework. “It is a massive club with European football, so why not? ”

Does he need me to tell him why not ?

 

Lennon, obviously bored waiting for the plane home, had a wee play on twitter last night;

” Working hard to get new players in today, tomorrow and Monday prior to CL signing deadline”.

“Balde has great attitude. Some rough edges we are working on in training but the talent is there”.

“Thinking of putting Irvine out on loan. May have to reassess now.”

” Exceptional performance by the team. Really proud of them”

It was exceptional, considering their ages and inexperience. Still, they showed professionalism post match, simply getting in the bath and getting ready to go home.

Thanks to Barry Mcgonigle for that one.

Over on the other side of the city, Second Rangers beat ten man Brechin with the help of a penalty and a dodgy goal, and  somehow you get the feeling that that will be an oft repeated description of any other wins they have this season.

Its not all good news for them though, as any of their support them picking up the Herald will see this morning.

This week's front page splash

Shouldn’t be a surprise to any of them, but no doubt they’ll call it all lies and propaganda.

Charles Green says he has returned to save the club from ” bandits ” , presumably he means those people who are there purely for their own gains, which puts him in a precarious positon, but no doubt the straight talking Yorkshireman will convince everyone of his innocence.

Meanwhile, as this article in the Scotsman shows, there should be no need for anyone to be convinced of the remarkable ineptitude of manager Ally McCoist..

” In the latest Rangers ructions, it can be a dizzying business attempting to figure out who sides with who.

Yet, ultimately Charles Green, Ally McCoist, Craig Mather, Brian Stockbridge and Walter Smith can all be lumped together. To a greater or lesser degree, they can all stand charged with being complicit in the fact that Rangers’ affairs have been mismanaged to the point where once more we are talking about financial catastrophe being visited on the club.

Fifteen months on from the old Rangers being liquidated, there are siren voices saying the current incarnation could be only months away from sliding into administration. No lessons seem to have been learned, no ways seem to have been mended. It beggars belief that despite a share flotation that reportedly brought in £22 million, season-ticket sales of £13m and other commercial income of around £3m, the club sits with only £10m in the bank, as financial director Stockbridge admitted in a meeting with fans on Thursday.

The cash burn simply doesn’t square with the fact that Rangers are a third-tier club, newly promoted from the bottom rung. It starts to do so, mind, when you consider Rangers are also a club where the manager’s annual salary is believed to be £760,000, where two chief  executives could pocket more than a million in just over a year and where bonuses to executives exceeded £2m for the feat of winning the Third Division title with a £7m wage bill that ran to 28 times the budget of any of their competitors.

Rangers were supposed to make their way up to the top flight banking cash so, once there, they could make an assault on Celtic’s hegemony. Instead, they’ve squandered any potential reserves for no other reason, it seems, than the enrichment of certain individuals and to feel mighty despite the small-time environment in which they must operate. The hubris of former owner David Murray lives on as, it would seem, does the reckless overspend of Craig Whyte.

With good grace, McCoist didn’t shirk any questions on his part in the potential latest downfall. Asked on Friday if it would be alarming if the club were spending money they couldn’t afford, he said: “It would be, but Brian said the club are all right in that respect. It’s not losing money every month. Some months they are actually making money.”

McCoist was defensive on whether the club living beyond its means was directly linked to the player budget that he presented as a must, despite the modest nature of the challenge confronting Rangers. The club’s infrastructure and size made it inevitable their cost base would be way beyond other clubs in the third and fourth tiers. That is reasonable. But McCoist has recruited players, and a whole team of them now, on salaries that no club outside of Celtic would dare contemplate.

“Well the wages are down again this year, I know that,” he said. “Craig [Mather, who replaced Green as chief executive] said since the start of last season we’ve also lost ten players. We’ve lost six since last year, counting [Dorin] Goian and [Carlos] Bocanegra and boys like that. We brought in eight. It’s my job to get the best team I possibly can on the park for the fans in an effort to win the league and any other competition we are in.”

With Green telling him that he would be given £10m to spend on players in the event of a successful share issue, McCoist is entitled to be confused. However, McCoist cannot now be in any way be confused by the message being shouted out by former Ibrox directors. He admitted that the fact Alastair Johnston and Dave King have both spoken about the possibility of Rangers going into administration – King stating this could occur by Christmas – “would have to be a concern”.

“I definitely have a healthy respect for those two gentlemen, not just in the business sense but as Rangers men,” McCoist said. He accepted the pair had previously called much right on the affairs of Rangers, mostly in calling out Whyte. “Absolutely, there’s no doubt about it,” he said. “You’d have to say, in particular, those two gentlemen have voices that should be listened to.”

Yet if administration did happen, McCoist would not feel guilty about the costs he has racked up in conducting the club’s football business. “In the sense that I’ve not been told that we’re doing anything wrong,” he said. “If someone had said ‘don’t do that because you’re going to put the club at risk’, I would absolutely not do it. But I can’t act on something that I don’t have any knowledge of. So if someone said to me your wage bill is too high or your staff is too high, then that’s fine I can react to that and do something accordingly. But until that comes, it’s not my gig.”

The Rangers manager has said he would be willing to take a drop in wages but remains optimistic there won’t come a time that he will be agreeing to cut them with an administrator. “I’m not passing the buck here onto Brian Stockbridge but he is the financial director. He said there was £10m in the bank, and that not every month we were losing money, we were making money some months and there was money coming in from here and there. Rightly or wrongly, I didn’t see that I should be overly concerned about the current state. With the greatest respect, it’s maybe the board you should be asking about Dave King’s views.”

Administration has never been mentioned by the directors, McCoist said. “I’d hope if it was on the horizon, there would be an early warning system for us this time. Not like the last time, when we got 24 hours notice. You’d like to think we’d have a fair idea and have an opportunity to perhaps do something about it.”

Yet, even if McCoist understands the concept of cutting his cloth to suit – Queen of the South walked the third tier last season with a budget of £500,000 – he doesn’t necessarily agree with it. If told at the start of 2013 there was simply no more money to bring in players because of the need to build up profits for the long term, he said he would have found that “very disappointing” and “gone public” on such a block.

“I would have accepted that as long as everybody had a realisation of where we were. For example, everybody is saying you should be winning cups and this that and the next thing. What we have done from last year is bring in eight free transfers. That is what these guys are. Now I am thrilled, delighted and extremely grateful these boys are coming to our club. But they are free transfers from Motherwell, Kilmarnock, Southend, you know, but they are going to make us a better football team. But we are miles and miles and miles away from where we want to be.

“With the greatest respect, the boys from last year did not have the winning mentality in terms of winning cups. We have got one or two now that have in terms of [Ian] Black, [Cammy] Bell and [Jon] Daly but they have not won trophies religiously through their career. I can understand the [Queen of the South] argument, I don’t necessarily agree with it in the respect I believe our club is different. We are expected to win every game, no matter where we are or what state the club is in. I can understand totally the logic behind Queen of the South, but with the greatest of respect, if someone said you have their budget to win the league I would have said: ‘Right, fine, as long as everyone knows that is the case then let’s get on with it.’ It is not my decision.”

He really, really doesn’t get it, does he ?

The interview portion won’t be accepted by the zombie hordes, on account of ex Celtic View Andrew Smith being the author, but the press are beginning to turn on Scottish footballs golden boy, and thats a start, I suppose.

It was Bobby Lennox, Murdo MacLoed and Brian McLair in yesterdays photos, each depicting the nicknames of the players, Lemon, Rhino and Choccy.

Easy one today, who is this referring to ?

 

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Quinny
10 years ago

Henke

Nick
10 years ago

24 hours notice of the last administration? We all saw that coming for years!

scholzybhoy
10 years ago

GHOD !!

buyhiselllowgreen
10 years ago

Is that enrico annoni at the front of the henrik 7?

Kenny
10 years ago

3 monkeys in 1 pie scoffer! Nothing is Ally’s fault. Ally doesn’t know or understand anything. It’s absolutely nothing to do with Ally. All he knows is he is earning over three quarters of a million a year, bought millions of pounds worth of shares for pennies and everything seems to be fine because noone told him otherwise. Read these quotes in 6 months time and you will see why they went bust again, and of the pigs whose noses are in the trough none will be financially more bloated than the ‘honest simpleton’ who just didn’t understand anything.

A true ‘rangers man’ who didn’t ‘walk away’ or a calculated asset stripper who is gorging on a beast that is still to take its last breaths? A cheeky chappie none the less.

Frank McGaaaaarvey
10 years ago
Reply to  Kenny

Spot on Kenny. Sally’s motto should be “Hear no evil, See no evil, Speak in hackneyed, cliche-ridden sound bites to please the zombie hordes”.

Charlie Saiz
10 years ago

Wow so many to choose from..Henke Jinky Kenny and of course who sould forget the dynamic duo Freddie&Juninho…(hehe)

bhramblejelly
10 years ago

Magnificent 7….got to be Paul Byrne

krislowe
10 years ago

King of Kings

What we would nt give for the great one right now.

Blame game has started over at Sevco already, “just following orders..” and “not my job..” wont cut it im afraid Ally

binkabhoy
10 years ago

We’ve had so many great number 7’s – no matter who was the best, Henke will always the ‘The Magnificent’!

cass
10 years ago

LEAVE SALLY ALONE! GIVE HIM A PAY INCREASE
UP IT TO A MILLION A YEAR .
WORTH EVERY PENNY.
HE’S DOING A GRAND OLD TEAM OF A JOB.

Paulmcswiggan
10 years ago

Ally must stay give him more money to spend l m a o hail hail

Iljas Baker
10 years ago

Very funny picture and comment re the young team that played against Liverpool. Must say though the stuff about Rangers bores me, I can’t understand your appetite for it.

A couple of things that came through against Liverpool:

1. Liverpool’s men always looking for the ball, Celtic’s trying to avoid it a lot of the time it seems. This was also the case for much of last season.
2. Celtic’s problems are as much psychological as technical – when under pressure there’s a real lack of confidence that causes them to release the ball too soon and often without accuracy. And of course passing ability non-existent when under pressure.
3 Zuleska better than Foster at the moment – again the big man showed why he was overlooked for the English squad. Give Zuleska his due – he deserves to be first choice some of the time.

Ste-bhoy
10 years ago

In reading this, surely the scariest number for any second rangers fan is that they only have 10mil in the bank after collecting the season book money – roughly that means they were 3 million in the red six months after they’d, looks lets just call it ‘raised’, 23 million in share floatation.

I aint no accountant but, i’d be desperately worried if it was my club that was ALL there was in the bank when i was expecting a number closer to 30. very. worried. indeed.

Sean Cahill
10 years ago

I hope the media don’t get stuck into him too much – I want Comical Sally to stay. Agree with Iljas about how we’re playing at the moment. Another point to make about when we last had a really good team, under MON, was that whenever we had the ball in attack or were defending, there was always a team mate behind to pass to or get a tackle in whenever we needed it. We played as a real team then.
We’re a bit leaderless at the moment and need someone who can put his foot on the ball and look up and take a moment and then dictate the next attacking move.

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