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Celtic Diary Saturday March 1

An old friend of mine has passed away after a long period of suffering. He was a season ticket holder at Ibrox.

Manager Neil Lennon is looking forward to todays game, seeing it as a chance to get straight back on the bike after falling off it in Aberdeen last Tuesday;

“We will be looking for a reaction,” said the Irishman. “Every time we have had an adverse result we have bounced back very well. The players are all motivated to play.
“They have had a difficult night physically, playing 78 minutes with 10 men, but they kept pushing.”

Over an hours work-with just fifteen minutes break ? I hope they’ve had a lie down.

“They have had a couple of days recovery and they are all looking forward to playing. Inverness are going well, though. They have shown good form recently so itยดs a good game to get our teeth into again ”

Phew! Thank God.

March is a month for change, as we saw yesterday with the memories of Fergus McCanns entrance into Parkhead folklore. Round about this time of year, something equally jaw dropping took place in 1977.

Alfie Conn, once of Rangers, signed for Celtic from Tottenham. Anyone around at the time will remember the shock and the headlines. He became the first player-certainly first high profile player, to play for both clubs in the post war period, and the only one who remains likeable ( apart from Stephen Pressley ) In fact, I think he’s the only one who still lives in Scotland, all the others having left for pastures new.

This is him at Rangers,

Then shortly after ย he joined Tottenham

where he learned wash and shave, before joining Celtic, where he completed his recovery from playing for Rangers.

Perhaps we could carry on the tradition. Majdid Bougherra is available on a free transfer. He says he wants to return to Ibrox, but couldn’t we buy him and then loan him out to an Egyptian team ? They hate him over there. Actually, he’s not overwhelmingly popular anywhere, but an Egyptian pal of mine has a real dislike of him, and when he realised he played for Rangers-whilst watching a game with me-his feelings ย just intensified.

Actually, thats a lot of retraining.

Right, silly season over.

Wee bit of gossip. The club have decided that there is a place for a statue of Fergus McCann, and it will be right behind the North Stand, which, without him, simply wouldn’t exist. Its a big ‘un as well.

Fergus McCanns takeover at Celtic is remembered by Hugh MacDonald in the Herald today, and its a much better read than anything else I’ve come across on those earth moving events twenty years ago;

By the way-did Keith Jackson really tell Radio Scotland listeners that “Fergus single handedly pulled Celtic back from the brink” before clarifying this a few minutes later with ” of course he didn’t do it alone ,”

Fuck me. He talks like he writes.

Anyway, back to March 1994….

David Low had more than a ringside seat for the battle for Celtic in 1994.

John Keane, Fergus McCann, Willie Haughey and Michael McDonald stand outside Celtic Park in September 1994. Picture: Martin Shields

John Keane, Fergus McCann, Willie Haughey and Michael McDonald stand outside Celtic Park in September 1994. Picture: Martin Shields

He was Fergus McCann’s corner man when his strategy of usurping the incumbent board through receiving the proxy votes on shares was the principal weapon in bringing the fight for the very existence of Celtic to a dramatic conclusion. On the 20th anniversary of the McCann-led takeover, Low, a financial analyst still based in Glasgow, can look back on the events of 1994 with the wisdom of experience but his retellling of the key moments reveals how close Celtic came to going out of business and how McCann was bold, even reckless, as the crisis mounted. This is the inside story of how a club came back from the brink in the words of someone who was there at all the crucial moments.

The First Meeting with Fergus McCann

There was a meeting of a few Celtic fans who were worried about what was happening at Celtic.

This was in 1992. David Murray was borrowing more money, Rangers were having more success, Celtic did not have a proper stadium with the Taylor report kicking in and the board clearly did not have access to any money.

I met a few like-minded wealthy Celtic fans who shared the concerns I had. One of them suggested I meet this strange fellow called Fergus McCann who seemed determined to help Celtic.

I went over to see him in his apartment in Montreal in the winter of 1992. He invited me in and made me a cup of coffee. I remember this meeting clearly because the cup of coffee was brimming to the full and I had to concentrate on it not spilling on his table.

He said: “Ok, Mr Low. Who are you, why are you here and what do you want?”

I loved that directness. It wasn’t said in a cold way but in a business-like, no bullshit manner. This saves time. Most of the business world is populated by timewasters. He wasn’t one.

I liked him and what he stood for almost from that second. In the whole time I have known him – and I talked to him this week – he has not changed one iota. You always know where you are with Fergus whether you agree with him or not.

His determination was obvious. He explained he had been trying to help Celtic since 1988. The board didn’t want to know.

The Plan

I unveiled my plan as an investment analyst, having dissected the share register and the articles of association. It was to acquire shares quietly from disenfranchised, dislocated and disrespected shareholders. My proposal was to gain their support. We wanted to pick up enough shares or support to call a general meeting and replace the board in conjunction with a capital injection from Fergus and other wealthy fans.

Fergus asked lots of questions. I told him that the three families who owned Celtic did not get on and he should not look upon them as a group. About 40% of shares were held outside the board. When I visited shareholders you found they were unhappy. There was an issue over the registering of shares.

The board had a right of veto but I had a cunning plan. I told Fergus that if we got them to sign a stock transfer form we could have an irrevocable proxy for their votes.

The share register does not change but we control those shares and when we get control we will then register them .

He said: “This is a very good plan, Mr Low, and I wish you all the luck in the world but I cannot support you on that.”

I said: “Why not?”

He replied: “All the money I have, Mr Low, is going in the club. I am not going to reward these guys for the state they have put the club in. If you succeed, I will be first in the queue for money for the club.”

That was good enough for me. He was committing funds to the club. I left that meeting a very happy bunny. I felt I had an ally.

I was proved right. He always delivered on the button.

The Gathering of the Shares

We were always a loose coalition. Me, Fergus, Brian Dempsey, John Keane, Eddie Keane, Jack Flanagan, Michael McDonald. The only thing we had in common was our love of Celtic.

I went about acquiring shares and it was easier than I thought.

Shareholders kept saying “we are with you”, from Canada to the north of Ireland. Within three months I had 40% of Celtic in this office and the board did not have not a Scooby.

But we needed 51%. We spoke to a shareholder who feigned support but promptly called the Whites or the Kellys. The cat was out the bag. But they did not know the extent of our endeavours. That was when we started hitting turbulence.

We were at war. We ended up fighting for two years.

The Fight

Celtic are getting worse, Rangers are getting stronger and it is getting nearer nine titles. We called an egm in November 1993. Celtic needed money and we came up with a plan for a cash injection of ยฃ17.9m. The board rejected that. Everybody was depressed as the club was clearly heading for the buffers. The team was terrible and the fans are agitating. There was a feeling of ‘let’s pack our tents and go’.

I said: “What do you mean? This is the end of the board. They cannot reject such a capital injection. It is a matter of time before they collapse. The next call they will receive is form the bank saying: ‘How could you do that?'”

They were into the Bank of Scotland for ยฃ5m. Within three months, the bank wanted its money back. It wanted the money or personal guarantees.

Eight Minutes from the End

It was eight minutes and I can say that with certainty. I was there. It was the end of February when the bank said to the board: “Give us our money back or give us personal guarantees from all of you.”

These were not wealthy men.

Kevin Kelly and Jack McGinn came to see us in an office in Park Terrace and told us the bank wanted money. They said they had a meeting with Gerald Weisfeld who was going to pay off the overdraft but there was no plan for the future.

I told them not to go to the meeting with Weisfeld but to tell the bank that a solution could be found. The bank then basically said: “We want a million within 48 hours and another four million by the end of the week.”

I phoned up Fergus and got him off the golf course in Phoenix, Arizona. I told him: “Your time has come. They want ยฃ1m.”

He says “okay.”

He authorises the ยฃ1m and books a flight to Glasgow. He arrives on the morning of the fourth of March.

We then had a meeting and then went to the bank. The deadline was 12 noon. We stayed until the money arrived as these were as the days before immediate transfers.

We picked up a banker’s draft and briskly walked, not ran, up to the Bank of Scotland and gave them the draft.

The paperwork was signed, with me as a witness, and that is when the 11.52 comes in. I remember looking at my watch and noting the time.

Four days later, the other ยฃ4m was paid. That was all a reckless risk on the part of Fergus. It says Fergus is a blind, mad Celtic fan or he was confident in his business plan.

Maybe both.

All he had achieved by then was to become Celtic’s largest unsecure creditor. He was not on the board, he has no share. We all trail up to Celtic Park to get control of the club. We have to get Fergus on to the board.

I can only remember getting Fergus to change his mind twice. The first one was supporting my plan over shares and then other was giving the board members money.

He was against that but bowed to reality. We were in control. We then had to have a general meeting to convert his loans into equity and to register the shares and put in more money. Michael McDonald and Willie Haughey joined the board and we then had the big share issue in December ’94.

The Fans

At the end of season 1993/94, I remember sitting in an office in Parkhead thinking: ‘What have we here, it is a bag of crap . . .’

Due diligence showed it was far worse than we thought. Everybody was owed money. It was a tough gig. Then there is the move to have the share issue on the AIM market that took from March to December.

When we announced it after being beaten by Raith Rovers in the league cup final no-one knew how successful it would be. But we seemed to have unleashed some sort of pent-up enthusiasm in the Celtic support. The genie was out the bottle. We had to have a second offer to meet the demand. It was the most successful football share offer ever, maybe still is.

We had the funding to build the stadium. This is the story of the business machinations. There is one to be told about the way the fans had a major part to play in the momentum that forced change.

They were the energy behind change.

Fergus the man

I genuinely think he is a top man because he tells the truth. He usually gets the big decisions right and pursues his objectives ruthlessly and efficiently. He is not a saint but he was very refreshing. It is unusual to meet someone like him in business.

He did three unusual things: First, he invested blind. Second, he put in such a significant proportion of his wealth, some say 80%. Third, he changed his mind over paying the board money to leave.

It is difficult to come to any other conclusion than he was a big Celtic fan. He is synonymous with good business practice but there was more than that. He did not screw anybody either. The fans bought the shares at the same price as Fergus. He was honest in all his dealings and that is unusual in business.

The Legacy

All those tough decisions that he and the board had to make have been proven to have been as sound as a pound. The pressure came from the world and his wife, some fans being manipulated by the mainstream media, some from the displaced and the disgruntled.

The press was getting worked. This was making his job very difficult. But he stuck to the tough decisions. And that was 100% the right thing to do. We had to spend money on a stadium so that impacted on paying for the squad. Looking back, we were right and David Murray was wrong.

That is why we are where we are and Rangers are where Rangers are.

Future for Celtic

I actually believe Celtic face a bigger crisis now than they did in the early nineties. The team I started to go to see in the 60s was then experiencing an upswing under Jock Stein. There were the two European Cup finals and the losing semi-finals too.

I see no prospect of Celtic of competing at that level. Celtic have to get out of Scotland. They are trying to run up a down escalator and that is extremely difficult.

UEFA is adamant that the rules stay whereby if you have a football association then you have to play in that country.

Its refreshing to know that there are still some decent sports writers around.

Back to toady, and Inverness are in tow again-we’d better get used to it, I suppose, and Celtic must get their act together to avoid the broken crest headlines that would follow a second consecutive defeat. Neil Lennon wants to put last week aside and look forward;

“It’s not the end of the world – it’s the end of a very good run.

“But I thought we played very well on the night and showed great desire not to lose the unbeaten record, playing with 10 men for 78 minutes.

“Now we just have to keep them motivated and bowling long.

“We have only conceded 14 goals this season, so we’ve got to try and keep that down and maybe break a record there.

“And we will try to get over 100 points.”

Eighteen goals conceded is the record, and over one hundred points would be fine.

What would be finer though, is to see the new players, such as Johansen , Bitton and Griffiths make their place in the team secure. We have lost four top players recently, and Lennon has admitted to this season being somewhat transitional.

Okay, we’ve got the new boys in-and some of them look the part. Lets get on with it.

Elsewhere, the civil war at Ibrox rumbles on. Like the president of the Ukraine, who has chosen to remain silent as Russian troops invade the Crimea in the south of the country, Ally McCoist refuses to discuss the crisis at his back door.

Despite the reminders aplenty in the press of how a financially stricken club should be saved, the clueless Klan leader of the er, clueless Klan , has a plan all of his own;

Posted Image

Er, okay. We won’t.

At yesterdays press conference, he decided he only wanted to talk about football-possibly for the first time since he began his crusade to destroy his club on the field while others took care of its demise off it.

He’s not taking sides in the battle between the Kings men and the capitalists. Though to be fair, he has already backed most of them.

Funnily enough, he wasn’t asked any questions about why the new clubs accounts hadn’t been submitted to the AIM yesterday, and they are now overdue.

Could this be because his wages are in them ? Or could it be that they haven’t found anyone to sign them off ?

Or could it be that when they do show them, it will show us that Administration is on the way. and that would affect season book sales.

No, he just kept trotting down the old path of telling everyone he needs a cash injection. Theres another kind of injection it would be much kinder to give them. To finally put them out of their misery .

The goings on at Ibrox are a wonderful example of how not to save a club, compared to what happens ย you get the right man in for the job.

I won’t be the only one raising a glass to the man with a plan and a bunnet to keep it in.

Thanks again, Fergus.

You helped us to be proud again when it looked like we never would be.

 

Joe Cassidy was the dashing chap in the picture yesterday. Against Falkirk , he once dashed over to a fellow called Tommy Scott during a game and punched him on the jaw, breaking and splitting it. Of course, these days the victim would have fell over long before the punch was thrown, but Cassidy was rightly sent off.

From wikipedia;

Joseph “Joe” Cassidyย (14 February 1894 โ€“ 23 July 1949) was aย Scottishย footballย player, mainly associated withย Celtic. Cassidy played for the club between 1912 and 1924, although his football career was interrupted by theย First World War. He served in the British Army in the Black Watch (Royal Highlanders) 1/7th Fife Battalion and won theย Military Medal, which led to him being nicknamed “Trooper Joe”.

They were an imaginative lot in those days. Other players on the books were Brickie Pete, Miner Alf and Ladies Underwear Distributor Stan. Who always seemed tired and distracted.

Heres one you might know…

 

 

 

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Kris Lowe
10 years ago

“For every five pounds Celtic spend, we will spend ten.” D Murray

is mounted above the McCann Study in the bucolic spender of the McCann mansion. The self made millionaire who delivered ,absolutely, on all his dealings with Celtic FC will allow himself a wry smile as he picks up his jacket, puts on a bunnet, and heads for the airport to see the unveiling of a bronze statue.

D Murray’s whereabouts are unknown

Althetim
10 years ago

Paul McGugan

Great player.

Is it too early to be drinking?

10 years ago
Reply to  Althetim

It’s 1700 somewhere in the world. Bottoms up!

Mark Gallagher
10 years ago

is it Owen Archdeacon

Stevie
10 years ago

Used to be a Hun but he’s alright now, Alfie, Alfie

gerard
10 years ago

Thars paul mcguigan that is he just seemed to disappear from celtic I always wondered what happened to him

MarkyBhoy
10 years ago
Reply to  gerard

Polis

HoudiniBhoy
10 years ago

I thought that was Owen Archdeacon at first but no, it’s McGuigan right enough

bogbohy
10 years ago

Wasn’t the same David Low looking to invest in the huns a few years back? Can anyone confirm this? I remember reading it on the record and thinking wtf! Not sure if it was ever legit tho.

bogbohy
10 years ago
MarkyBhoy
10 years ago

Jst over two days to go…….meanwhile, the word on the wire is that the tic paid over the odds for Lennox Castle.
And while we’re all praising the Bunnet for his time, vision and backboned principles let us ponder his equivalent in today’s Boardroom…………….e e e…………
That’s right, cos jst like 94 McCann was a fan and not on the Board. So who’s our McCann man now? Some may point to Eco, scourge of the Westhorn loyal. Others may point to the tenacious Ms Findlay. My vote goes to Auldheid and his exemplary understanding of integrity. Whether it’s the application of rules & regulations or the issuing of Licenses, he has the Bunnets nous.

10 years ago

we will win the league,!! then hopefully make the group stages of the UEFA CHAMPS LEAGUE , secure in the knowledge that thepish at IPOKES IS STILL GOIN’ ON AND ON AND ON BLESS THEIR BLUEBALLS

holy sea
10 years ago

Good win.Should have been more.I hope those that doubted
Griffiths,will admit they got it wrong.He will be a prolific
goalscorer for us in the league.
Anybody know why GB were missing at CP today ?

deadhead67
10 years ago

banned maybe

Jamie Greenan
10 years ago

Yeah think it is McGugan – in my opinion toss up between him and Archdeacon who was the worst Celtic player of the 80’s

andy docherty
10 years ago

I think the GB are proving a point – with them, some atmosphere, without them, no atmosphere. I expect they’ll attend every other game this season just so that the board and the fans know their importance to the atmosphere at CP.

holy sea
10 years ago

Andy,I agree.
Deadhead is just being a bit of a dopehead.Why can’t some
fans let bygones be bygones.Let us be the ONE support,for
God’s sake.

bogbohy
10 years ago

was a lil bit raging at the signing of griffiths but today he was outstanding. It is just scotland and he has a long way to go (ie doing that consistently) but to me I’m already liking him way more than Hooper (tho didn’t like him much) What I loved as much as the quality was his attitude. He ran his balls off, something hooper very rarely did if ever. Too many players have been lazy for us over the years, fannyflaps for example. Griffiths attitude was brill and backed by quality.

bondibrian
10 years ago

MON THE HOOPS.

THE BUNNET DUNNIT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hail the Bunnet, I say, HAIL The Bunnet!!!

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