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[Official TC Thread] General Fan Action & Sack the Board Thread - TalkCeltic Signed letter

Discussion in 'Celtic Chat' started by Notorious, Sep 3, 2025.

Discuss General Fan Action & Sack the Board Thread - TalkCeltic Signed letter in the Celtic Chat area at TalkCeltic.net.

  1. Notorious Gold Member Gold Member

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    You haven’t missed anything @CountyDownFaithful



    Those clinging to the view that Hearts can’t possibly win the Scottish Premiership should be doubting themselves by now. Rangers are shot to bits after Kevin Muscat became the latest manager to turn the manager’s job down, Celtic are teetering on the brink of another Covid season. Derek McInnes and his team should fancy this.


    The usual caveats apply with this one. It’s early in the season, only eight games in. This time last year, Aberdeen staged a storming comeback from 2-0 down at Parkhead to announce their arrival as challengers and everyone knows how that ended. Celtic swatted them aside.

    The difference between then and now is obvious. Twelve months ago, Kyogo Furuhashi, Daizen Maeda and Nicholas Kuhn spearheaded a team in green-and-white banging in goals from all angles.

    Yesterday, a Honda Civic of a Celtic side, the poorest since Tony Mowbray’s tenure – if not the 1990s – slid to their first defeat to Dundee at Dens Park in 37 years. They look incapable, on current form, of swatting a fly.

    In their last five games, the champions have suffered two defeats, two draws and one victory. That lone success came from an injury-time winner at home to Motherwell and fooled no one.

    They started yesterday’s game against a struggling Dundee side with an ineffectual forward line featuring Sebastian Tounekti, Kelechi Iheanacho and Yang Hyun-jun. For the sixth time this season they failed to score and their record in the Premiership now reads 11 goals in eight games. Hearts, Hibernian, Dundee United and Motherwell have all scored more.

    There was a point at Dens Park where the stats showed 94 per cent possession for the visitors and no shots on target. A team who retain possession for possession’s sake, only once in their eight league games have they led at half-time.


    There’s no secret, no mystery, surrounding their current malaise. Spend transfer windows hoarding money, low-balling selling clubs and throwing modest sums at average players and, sooner or later, the chickens come home to roost. When Celtic fans threw tennis balls on to the pitch in protest at the board’s running of the club, it was as close as anyone in green-and-white came to hitting the target all day.

    The blame game is underway and regardless of where fans take aim, they’re probably right.

    Chief executive Michael Nicholson – the Invisible Man of Parkhead – has shrugged aside the concerns of fan groups over dysfunctional recruitment. That’s a hard line to maintain when they hold £77million in the bank, failed to spend on a centre forward, signed two left wingers of dubious quality, banked the £17m for Kuhn and failed to sign a replacement.

    Tounekti’s career stats offer little evidence of a player likely to chip in with a significant number of goals or assists. Belgian Michel-Ange Balikwisha – a target for 18 months – cost the guts of £5million and that could use some explaining as well. Benjamin Nygren provides a reminder that £2.2million doesn’t buy you much in a market place changing fast while Celtic stand still. Whenever the Swede plays in the same midfield as Reo Hatate and Callum McGregor, it clearly doesn’t work.

    Hailed as the big-ticket signing, Kieran Tierney is a shadow of his former self. That Yang and Anthony Ralston are still hanging around the starting eleven tells its own story. When Johnny Kenny is the half-time Hail Mary it shines an unflattering light on a squad lacking depth and quality.

    On Saturday, Steven Pressley spoke to me last week about of how hard it is to enjoy one of the hardest jobs in Scottish football. He must, surely, have enjoyed Dundee’s first home win over Celtic since Tommy Coyne was in his goal-scoring pomp in September 1988.

    With refreshing honesty, Pressley spoke of the ‘black cloud’; the malign weather front which moves across Scotland enshrouding under-fire managers in anger and negativity. Big Elvis was exposed to the elements when delusional Dundee fans signed an open letter demanding his removal earlier this month.

    Russell Martin received such a soaking he should have been carted out of Rangers on a ventilator. Jimmy Thelin stayed indoors until the cloud moved to Glasgow to douse Steve Clarke in violent thunderstorms.

    Ahead of a Europa League clash with Sturm Graz and a treacherous trip to Tynecastle next weekend, the cloud has now moved to Celtic Park, the rain tumbling heavily on Brendan Rodgers.

    While Rodgers is right to say that the attacking options at his disposal are more of a Honda Civic than a Ferrari, Celtic fans are entitled to expect more va va voom than they’re watching now.

    While Dundee – and Pressley – deserve immense credit for a display where they defended brilliantly and posed a relentless threat on the counter-attack, there is no circumstance where Celtic should lose 2-0 to a side deep in the relegation brown stuff.

    As he should, Rodgers took responsibility for a wretched performance. That cut no ice with Kris Boyd afterwards when the Sky Sports pundit accused the Parkhead boss of running down his contract while eyeing the exit door next summer.

    Ange Postecoglou’s return to the job market must have caught the attention of the Parkhead board over the weekend. While Big Ange’s homecoming might be the one thing an unpopular board of directors could do to boost their approval ratings, the second coming of Rodgers shows how tricky and unwise it can be to turn back the clock. From the boardroom to the dugout to the team, Celtic have grown stale. It’s a football club in need of new blood, new ideas, in every department.

    Speaking after his team swept Kilmarnock aside at Rugby Park, McInnes acknowledged that the champions were there to be shot at. If his pace-setting team set about the task with the same rigour as Dundee, evidence of a shift in the tectonic plates underpinning Scottish football will be hard to refute.

    Five points clear at the summit, with a chance to stretch their lead if they win next Sunday, even their goal difference is better.

    Paul Sheerin watched on from the Dens Park stand yesterday and the Hearts assistant manager saw nothing to scare the horses. Swatting Kilmarnock aside with clinical efficiency, Hearts should fancy their chances of going eight points clear next weekend.

    The chronic weakness of Celtic and Rangers offers a rare and precious window of opportunity. It would do Scottish football no harm at all if they pushed on and took it.
     
    Wee Baldy and CountyDownFaithful like this.
  2. Notorious Gold Member Gold Member

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  3. Champions67 Gold Member Gold Member

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    Might as well lock this thread and cancel the protests. Seems Brendan is the issue and that sacking him will fix everything.
     
  4. eire4

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    Just ridiculous for me. At the end of the day the players and Rodgers are under performing there is absolutely no question about that. Having said that though they are still human beings not robots and the idea that they are not being effected by all that is going on off the field is just not realistic. Now again I say they are still under performing as players no question and Rodgers has to find better answers with what he has but there is no doubt that the cloud hanging over the club is clearly having a negative effect on the players on the pitch also and is making a bad situation worse.
    Ultimately though IMHO the vast majority of the blame for the hole we are in on the pitch is on Desmond, Lawwell, Nicholson and McKay who have created this mess and until they are gone we are more then likely heading for even worse.
     
  5. Ryanm1984

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    Have absolutely no issue with the protest and hope we do similar midweek as that will likely get the club into bother with uefa.

    The whole point of a protest is it's ment to be disruptive. Thought it was done well and gained a lot of attention too

    For those moaning it was disruptive or had a negative effect on the players. Do you know what's far more disruptive and has a far greater negative effect on the players?

    Selling out best players every * summer

    It's our club and we will be here long after the current squad have jumped at the 1st opportunity to * off to some midtable EPL * for a few extra grand a week. If the players don't like it they can * off, starting with that fat * in goals
     
    Last edited: Oct 20, 2025 at 10:28 PM
    Wee Baldy likes this.
  6. murphy88

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    It’s no even the selling players on, it’s the fact we didn’t even bother trying to replace some of them. Ending the window with Yang (who thought he was leaving) and Forrest who is finished as your two right wing options in a manager’s system that is heavily reliant on wingers (which the board knew when hiring him) is utterly * moronic. It’s a * disgrace.
     
    Wee Baldy, Champions67 and Ryanm1984 like this.
  7. Notorious Gold Member Gold Member

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  8. eire4

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    Good statement. I very much agree with the point too that while Rodgers and the team are underperforming the vast majority of the blame lies with the board who are clearly not fit to continue at Celtic and need to go.
     
  9. Notorious Gold Member Gold Member

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    If only MacBhoy and Luigi from the GB scored the goals yesterday