Author Archives: celtic

Celtic Fans, Red Eye Flights & Remembering Tommy Callaghan

It was a quiet flight this morning from Dublin at 6am on route to Glasgow. The flight was packed and there were plenty of familiar Celtic fans on board. Celtic v Dundee may not have the glamour of a midweek Champions League game but still Celtic fans are prepared to get out of their beds in the middle of the night to catch red eye flights and board buses bound for the Eastend of Glasgow. Incredible dedication and commitment to supporting our club home and away.

Confidence will be high after the Atalanta draw last week and the win over Motherwell at the weekend. Brendan Rodgers now feels he has the players in the squad to rotate key players when injured or needing a rest. CCV is back which gives the manager food for thought in the central defensive area.

All eyes will be on Luke McCowan against his old club if he starts after an impressive first start at the weekend. As a Celtic fan he will chomping at the bit to get on the pitch tonight.

Tonight that will be emotional after the death of Tommy Callaghan. Tommy starred for Celtic in the late and 1960’s & 70’s winning 14 major honours and was a regular at every home game working the lounges with George McCluskey and Dixie Deans. His presence around the place will be missed.

Celtic fans will also have one eye on cash strapped rivals, the rangers trip to Aberdeen to take on the inform team and our opponents at Hampden on Saturday evening in the semi-final of the League Cup.

Lets see how the SPFL table looks tonight when the final whistles sound at Celtic Park and Pittodrie.

Kick off is 19:45 and there are still a small amount of tickets for sale for the game which will be streamed live on Celtic TV. (Including Ireland & the UK)

Andrew Milne is Editor of More than 90 Minutes & the host of the Celtic Soul Podcast 

RETURN OF THE CELTIC SOUL PODCAST

CELTIC SOUL PODCAST | PADDY McMENAMIN | Football / Right Wing Protests / Palestine / Kneecap

Episode Sponsored by Kiely Heating & Plumbing Paddy McMenamin with Andrew Milne talks Football, Politics and Music

AUDIO

VIDEO

RUDI VATA DUBLIN BOOK LAUNCH

An Evening in Dublin with Rudi Vata will take place on 21st November for his Irish book launch. The event takes place at 7pm in the Academy Plaza Hotel, which is situated close to the juncture of O’Connell St and Cathal Brugha St in Dublin’s city centre.

Rudi played for the Celtic during a very difficult period in the early to mid-1990s. Signed for Celtic by Liam Brady, Rudi won a Scottish Cup winners medal in 1995, playing in a Celtic side managed by one of our club’s all-time greats Tommy Burns.  Rudi played alongside some great Celts including Paul McStay, Packie Bonner and John Collins.

One of the highlights of Rudi’s career was scoring goal from a free-kick in a 3-0 Celtic victory over Rangers in 1995. Rudi’s son, Rocco, is also a professional footballer and he made a number of first team appearances for Celtic last season, but is now playing for Watford.  Rocco is an Ireland U-21 international.

This event, aims to bring football fans in Ireland together to celebrate Rudi’s remarkable career. Attendance is free and copies of Rudi’s book, Football, Freedom and Paradise, will be available for purchase on the night, should you wish to buy one.

During the event, Rudi will be interviewed by his co-author Gerry McDade about his life and the inspiration behind his autobiography. Born in Albania in 1969, Rudi grew up under a repressive communist regime that stifled basic freedoms. He famously stated, “You do not choose to be born under a dictatorship, but you choose whether to live under it.” Devoted to football, he saw it as his path to freedom and self-determination.

After representing his country in France in 1991, Rudi defected and sought political asylum, beginning a journey that would lead him around the globe, including almost three years at Celtic FC. This is more than just a football story; it’s a powerful tale of a man who fought for his freedom and values.

This event is a fantastic opportunity to meet Rudi and hear about his incredible personal journey and illustrious football career.

Please get your free ticket to attend this event using the below Eventbrite link. Please feel free to share this invitation with members of your Celtic Supporters Club.

https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/an-evening-in-dublin-with-rudi-vata-celtic-fc-legend-tickets-1022484597957?aff=oddtdtcreator

The organisers are asking everyone to register as soon as possible to avoid disappointment. Once all the tickets are gone, they are gone. We have limited space so people will need to register to secure their attendance on the night.

More than 90 Minutes Issue 134

 

Issue 134 celebrated our 23rd Birthday of the fanzine first going on sale when Issue 1 went on sale outside Celtic Park. Some of the covers from over the years grace the cover once again including our first cover. Picking these covers bring back so many memories.

Celtic greats and players who have passed away, many who were interviewed for the fanzine or on stage by us including Sean Fallon, Billy McNeill, Bertie Auld and Phil O’Donnell. Celtic Legends Danny McGrain, Neil Lennon, Scott Brown, Artur Boruc, and Nakamura all graced the cover.

Musical hero Shane McGowan was remembered after he passed away. Great victories over rangers  and in Rome when we beat Lazio.

The attack on Celtic fans in Amsterdam that brought the Editor into the Dutch Embassy in Dublin to deliver a letter of protest from Irish Celtic fans who gathered outside to protest made the cover. We celebrated when Rangers died and the Kill the Bill protests. Pope Francis also made the cover as did our founding father Brother Walfrid

Inside this issue is packed with articles and regular features. We look back at 23 years of the fanzine and remember those we have lost from our team including Scott and David.

We look back on a hectic start to the  season including humping the rangers at Celtic Park, victory over Slovan Bratislava and the away days trip to Dortmund.  We look ahead to the rest of the Champions League campaign, No Pasaran the rise of the right and the genocide in Palestine.

John Fallon returns with his column on all things Celtic. With Matt O’Riley leaving for the EPL Paddy asks the question is the Grass always Greener on the other side of Hadrian’s Wall and look back at the players who have left to go down south over many decades.

Our Celtic CSC are North Celtic CSC who celebrated 5 years on the road with a big bash with John Hartson in the summer. Tim Molloy looks at the players who came in and those who moved on. Paddy is at the cinema to review Kneecap the movie. The Potter Archives covers the Glasgow Cup plus Eoin and Rachel give their opinion on all things Celtic.

SLIGO AWAY

Homeward bound after a great wee midweek away day watching Celtic. A friendly against League of Ireland team Sligo Rovers may not have the same excitement for Celtic fans as a Champions League away trip. But any Celtic fan who was in Sligo yesterday could only be impressed by the welcome they received from the local people, the buzzing pubs and the Sligo Rovers supporters.

I took the train from Drogheda to Dublin and then onto Sligo and met some other Celtic fans on the train. Big shout out to the Bhoys from Kirky Shamrock, Rabb and James for the company and the cans on the journey. The Bhoys got off at Ballymote to visit the monument to Celtic’s founding father Brother Walfrid before meeting up with us later for a few pre-match pints. It was a homcoming of sorts for Rab as his Dad was born in Wolfe Tone Street close to the ground.

There were plenty of familiar faces in the bars close to the ground including a bus load of North Kildare CSC crew. Club flags adored the ed of bars and in the stadium. There were no flares or Celtic ultras banging drums but a lone Palestine flag hung over the advertisement board beside a Lebanon flag placed in Solidarity.

Sligo has great links with Celtic  from the first ever Celtic team, Charlie Gorevin to the legendary Sean Fallon ( Sligo’s astro turf training pitch is named after Sean) and Treble winning manager, Wille McStay who’s winning team pictures adorned the walls in the local pubs. The latest connection is Johnny Kenny out on loan to Shamrock Rovers from Celtic but a Sligo fan at heart. His father Johnny senior was part of Sligo’s treble winning team.

The game gave a number of Celtic senior players who are on the fringes of the starting 11 a chance to get 90 minutes on the pitch in what was a competitive and entertaining game on a freezing cold night.

The Showgrounds was sold out, so a big thanks to Donnie for sorting me out with a ticket and showing me around the town. Celtic fans numbered about 500 and I witnessed Sligo shade the first half before a more composed performance in the second half and 2 late goals from Palma secured the win for the visitors. Palma will be happy with his 90 minutes and a hat-trick.

Sligo have big plans for a new stadium, so the future is bright for the wee bit of red. International break now for the Celtic players before we are back in the East End of Glasgow for the top of the table clash with Aberdeen at a Sold Out Celtic Park on Saturday 19 October.

Andrew Milne is Editor of More than 90 Minutes

 

 

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Ross County v CELTIC F.C. Matchday Minizine

More than 90 Minutes Match Day Minizine

Celtic travel  to the Highlands on Sunday for the midday kick off against Ross County  . The game will be shown  on tSky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Football channel’s.. Celtic TV will also stream the game.

 

AND IF YOU KNOW THE HISTORY?

AND IF YOU KNOW THE HISTORY?

Thirty years ago, a Canadian based businessman called Fergus McCann, took over Celtic Football Club.  The takeover brought to an end a very turbulent few years in the club’s history, a history that stretched back 106 years. The club were only eight minutes from that history ending.  

And those turbulent few years are the focus of a new comedy play called And If You Know The History?, to celebrate the 30th anniversary, 

It’s written by Jim Orr, who’s most recent Celtic related comedy play, Bend it like Bertie, played to sold out audiences at the Pavilion Theatre Glasgow before heading to the Westgate International Theatre in Las Vegas.

Jim commented, “playwrighting is a hobby for me, and once I’ve decided which part of the club’s history I’d like to write about, I then really enjoy spending time doing the research, reading books, watching videos, listening to interviews, etc. so that I end up being far more knowledgeable about that part of the club’s history. I then attempt to tell the story in as humorous and off-the wall fashion as possible.  AIYKTH? is no different.

The pre-takeover years were probably the darkest days in Celtic’s history.  As Celtic steadily deteriorated, conversely their main rivals Rangers were having the best period in their history and had every chance of breaking Celtic’s 9 league championships in a row record from the late 60s/early 70s. Also, Celtic were faced with finding tens of millions of pounds to construct an all-seated stadium (following the findings of The Taylor Report into the Hillsborough disaster), while Rangers already had an all-seated stadium.

I was too young to remember the period of Bend it like Bertie (1965), but I lived through the late 80s/early 90s and it wasn’t much fun! In fact, I ended up getting involved in a fans’ protest group (Save Our Celts) and got to meet some of the individuals who helped make the takeover possible, so this play is a bit more personal to me than the other Celtic plays I’ve written.

Also, as it covers six seasons, there is a lot more information that needs to be included compared to my other Celtic plays, and deciding what to leave out was a bit of a challenge, although I think I’ve managed to include all the key events, for example the signing of Mo Johnston. But it is still a madcap comedy!

We follow the unfolding events through the eyes of the Celtic daft Devlin family, Betty, her dad Joe and teenage son Michael. Three generations of Celtic fans, with different views on what the future holds for their beloved team.

The story kicks off after the high of Celtic winning the double in the club’s centenary season in 1988, but things then steadily go downhill for Celtic.  However, in March 1990, a rare victory over Rangers in the Scottish  Cup, gave them cause for optimism.

And as the Devlins celebrated that night, they had a visitor, a very strange man, wearing a bunnet, with a plan! And this visit kicked off a series of events that would change the history of Celtic, forever.

The next few years were an emotional rollercoaster for the Devlins and every other Celtic fan, until the takeover was completed and Fergus McCann’s business ally Brian Dempsey announced outside Celtic Park on a rainy night on 4 March 1994,’the game is over, the rebels have won!’

The seeds were planted that day, which has ultimately led to Celtic becoming the dominant football club in Scotland, achieving unprecedented domestic success over the last decade.

Incidentally, the ‘?’ at the end of the title, signifies that some artistic licence has been used to tell the story of certain parts of the club’s history, this is the off-the wall bit!

The cast comprises of:

  • Matt Costello – Matt has appeared in a host of television, film, and stage productions, but is probably best known for playing Stevie the Bookie in the iconic Still Game.
  • Jerry Taylor – Jerry is best known for starring in and producing ‘Singin I’m No a Billy He’s a Tim.  His new play ‘Blame it on the Bucky’ will be touring next month.
  • Alyson Orr – Alyson has performed in numerous productions at the Pavilion Theatre, Glasgow and also with many other theatre companies, the most recent being, Pitlochry Festival Theatre in ‘Sunshine on Leith’.
  • Kyle Gardiner – Kyle has appeared in a number of stage productions, recently starring in The Funeral Club at Oran Mor. He is also a panto regular and will play the title role of Oor Wullie at Dundee Rep later this year.

And If You Know The History? is on at Websters Theatre, Glasgow from 10 October to 12 October.

Tickets: https://webstersglasgow.com/whats-on/event/and-if-you-know-the-history/

THE DARLING OF CELTIC PARK IN BOTH BELFAST AND GLASGOW

If we trawl through the long and celebrated history of Celtic it is filled with stories of great victories, titles and cups galore, European Cup glory, a magnificent stadium, the world wide fan base, the Irish and Scottish diaspora, the refusal to take down the tricolour in the 1950’s, the refusal to play in Hungary in the 1960’s, 9 in a row in the 1970’s, the Hampden riot in the 1980’s, Fergus McCann in the 1990’s, Martin O’Neill in the noughties, and 9 in a row once again in the 21st century, it’s a wonderful history since 1888 until 2021 and will only be added to in the future decades.

But while we may marvel at the achievements of our great club over the last 133 years, it’s not the trophies, medals, titles, cups which are the tangible evidence of greatness over the period that our focus will always be on, although it’s always great to see the rewards of our labour, but what makes us dream the dream or make the trip for the red eye flight or the early morning ferry is the players who pull on the green and white hoops, the ordinary working class guys who lived down the street back in the day to the mega bucks stars of the modern era.

The players who live the dream which we can only imagine, the bhoys who really are bhoys, pulling on that jersey in the changing rooms before a game, walking down through the tunnel and on to the pitch as the 60,000 rise to welcome them, the waves to the crowd, the Huddle, the kick off, the goal celebrations with the crowd, a magical moment, and the victory to the adulation of the terraces, for the players, who generally are working class kids from the housing estates throughout Europe, they achieve a greatness in the beautiful game which we don’t begrudge, they just live the dream that we all would aspire to.

They are the players to whom we have cheered and adulated throughout the decades, they brought our dreams to fruition, the brilliant save, decisive tackle or last minute goal, they have brought us to places we never dreamed off, both literally and metaphorically, the heights of emotion and the depths of despair, but in moments of pathos to exquisite delight they brought us a journey which made our lives ultimately fulfilling and thrilling at times as they exhibited skill supreme with gay abandon, spectacular match winning conviction to deliver our dreams.

The players in those green and white hoops have made life a little bit easier when times were tough and beyond expression in the good times, as Jock Stein observed, ‘the Celtic jersey doesn’t shrink to fit inferior players’, but even more poignant during the depression days of the hungry 1930’s was the defiant attitude of ‘when we had nothing, we had Celtic’!

And Celtic was and is the players, the stadium provided the infrastructure and the fans the backdrop, albeit in Celtic’s case the support was left, right and centre, but it was the players in every generation who provided us with those moments we will never forget, those in the past we have read about and created the history, the players in our lifetimes who delivered on so many occasions, and the present day modern player who continue the tradition, they carry the mantle of what it means to be a Celtic player………..

‘ …….and they gave us James McGrory and Paul McStay,

they gave us Johnstone, Tully, Murdoch, Auld and Hay,

and most of the football greats have passed through Parkhead’s gates,

for to play football the Glasgow Celtic way…….’!

Willie Maley, James Kelly, Jimmy Quinn, Sandy McMahon, Sunny Jim Young, Tommy McInally, Patsy Gallacher, Johnny Thompson, Jimmy McGrory, Malky McDonald,  Jimmy Delaney, Willie Fernie, Sean Fallon, Neilly Mochan, Jock Stein, Bobby Evans, Bertie Peacock, Bobby Collins, Paddy Crerand, wee Bertie, Cesar, Jinky, Murdoch, Gemmell, Chalmers, big Yogi, George Connelly, Harry Hood, Dixie Deans, Hay, McGrain, King Kenny, Macari, Johnny Doyle, Champagne Charlie, McStay, big Packie, Aiken, Provan, McAvennie, Jackie Djiekanowski,  Di Canio, Cadete, Van Hoojijdonk,  Henrik, big bad John, Moravcik, Lenny, Sutton, both Holy goalie’s, McGeady, Van Dijk, Wanyama, the Derry Pele, Tierney, Broony, Dembele and Edouard!

Amazingly in the first 100 years only 12 non Scottish players  appeared in a Celtic jersey, in fact in the first 50 years only Patsy Gallacher! Then Cook (Ireland) and Kennaway ( Canada) in the 1930’s, Milne (US), Peacock, Fallon Tully, Gallagher in 1950’s, Latchford and Packie in the 1980’s, all the rest were Scottish, incredible when you think how international a squad we have now. But they all wore the Hoops with pride and none more so than the player I’m going to focus on, the inimitable Charles Patrick Tully, or as he was known throughout Scotland and Ireland and even on the steps of the Vatican, Charlie Tully.

Tully was born in Belfast in 1924, in McDonnell St in the Lower Falls, he was born into a divided city a few years after partition and the Belfast pogroms when loyalist mobs led an onslaught on nationalist areas, hundreds killed and a country divided, a sectarian statelet created after the war of independence and civil war, for the whole of Charlie’s short life it would be a one party unionist state, nationalism was at a low ebb but as in Glasgow after the General Strike and depression days, so in Belfast, ‘when we had nothing we had Celtic!

In the 1890’s Belfast Celtic was formed, taking the name and hooped jerseys from their more famous Glasgow counterparts, like the original they were more than a football club, as Tommy Burns would say in later times, ‘they represented a community and a cause’. Belfast Celtic would soon become the dominant team in the 6 counties, and as in Glasgow they would have a rivalry which embraced the religious divide with Linfield.

Their story would be the story of Irish football for the next 50 years until the day in 1948 when during a riot the Linfield fans invaded the pitch at Windsor and attacked the Celtic players, manhandled Jimmy Jones, the Celtic centre forward, over the wire onto the terraces where they again attacked him and broke his leg, Celtic never played in Irish football again. This was the world that Charlie Tully grew up in and when he was 20 he signed for Belfast Celtic, their stadium, Celtic Park, was down the Donegall Road, just off the Falls Road but only a mile from Windsor Park as the crow flies, yet a different world.

The Linfield support were 100% loyalist from the Shankill and Sandy Row, the Belfast Celtic support from the Falls Road and nationalist, the clubs differed as in Glasgow, Linfield didn’t sign Catholics as a rule, whereas if you were good enough you played for Celtic. Their rivalry transcended the ages but Belfast Celtic were the dominant club and by the time they left football they had accumulated 20 titles and cups including 11 titles in the last 20 years, in the last decade their star player was a guy who would take Glasgow by storm in the 1950’s, one Charlie Tully.

He moved to Glasgow in 1948 just before that horrendous game against Linfield, Celtic had been going through the horrors for many years, 2 titles in the previous 12 years when Tully arrived and only one title in his 11 years at the club, in fact only 3 titles in 40 years from 1926 until Jock Stein arrived in the mid 1960’s, and some Celtic fans are complaining after 15 titles in 20 years in the modern era.

Charlie Tully was an instant hit at Parkhead where the fans took to him like they did in Belfast, in his first ‘Old Firm game Tully mesmerised a Rangers defence, if anything would endear a new player to the Celtic fans it was a display like that, he danced and jinked his way around a poor Rangers full back just like Jinky would do years later. Tully became a legend at Celtic throughout the 1950’s, famously in a match at Falkirk he scored from a corner, the ref disallowed it so Tully took it again and repeated the feat, an in swinging corner which many try but few achieve and he did it twice, also in a game for the ‘norn irn’ against England he repeated the unique trick, amazing stuff.

Tully missed out on the Coronation Cup victory in 1953, the year I was born, but was part of the team to win the double in 1954 with big Jock as captain. The 1950’s were lean years on the trophy front for Celtic, as were the 1930’s and 1940’s and indeed the 1960’s until Jock came back as Manager.

Still Tully was a star amidst relative mediocrity, his greatest day and possibly Celtic’s after Lisbon was the 1957 League Cup final, in front of 82,000 fans, Celtic annihilated their greatest rivals 7-1 which is still a record score for any major cup final. Tully provided the cross for the first goal by Sammy Wilson, Mochan made it 2-0 at half time, but in the second half Celtic ran riot, Mochan added another, a hat trick from McPhail and the final goal from Willie Fernie, as the words of the song go, ‘Oh Hampden in the Sun, Celtic 7 Rangers 1’, for Tully it was his swan song, he mightn’t have lit up the final much like Georgie Best at Wembley in 1968, but they played their part in great victories and like Georgie it would be his last trophy for his club, two great Belfast footballers, magicians with a ball, Georgie might have been the first superstar in England but Charlie Tully might have pre-empted him in Glasgow.

You know the more you read about Tully you can make comparisons with Georgie, Patsy Gallacher, Aiden McGeady, Paddy McCourt, all Irish, temperamental, geniuses with a ball, prone to a lack lustre approach at times but when on song, nothing like them.

The stories about Tully off the field were as numerous as his brilliant displays on it, he once said to Bertie Peacock, ‘you’re the Irish coffee but I’m the cream’, bit like Cloughie said to Martin O’Neill, ‘you were a hod carrier, John Robertson was an artisan’, or when Tully would be criticised for lack of effort at training, ‘you don’t learn to play snooker by walking around the table’, obviously Tully would have been a Hurricane Higgins fan, another great Belfast sportsman.

Again when once asked would he have got into Stein’s Lisbon team, ‘oh yes, I could have taken the corners’! But the best story of all which has gone into folklore was when Celtic visited the Vatican during a tour of Italy. Tully would even tell the story himself, when the players were meeting the Pope some pilgrim in the square looked up and said, ‘who’s that standing beside Charlie Tully’?

Not unlike the story told about that other great Belfast football genius, Georgie Best, after winning £50,000 at the casino, staying in the Grosvenor in London, Miss World lying naked on his bed as the wee porter arrives with the dearest Dom Perignon, ‘where did it all go wrong Mr Best’! Three Belfast geniuses, Best, Higgins and Tully, they lit up any arena they appeared in, they had a flair for the spectacular, and that little bit of recklessness that’s in the make up of every genius, and sadly they all passed relatively young.

On a personal level I grew up in the 1960’s in one of the new estates in West Belfast built to overcome the chronic overcrowding and lack of housing in the Lower Falls, we were too young to remember Tully but we used to walk down the Donegall Road to Windsor for international games when Georgie Best was in his prime although we wouldn’t dare go near it when Linfield were at home.

We passed by the old Celtic Park, the red brick stone front, the red corrugated iron fences, it was an iconic stadium, the home of Belfast Celtic. We played football in the Down and Connor league, one of my childhood friends and fellow player was Brendan Tully, nephew of the great Charlie. We played together until the start of the conflict when football became irrelevant for many of us, my future would include years in Long Kesh where as Brendan’s was a career in Irish football, his uncle Charlie by this time was Manager at Bangor and he brought Brendan down for trials and that gave him his break into semi professional football.

Of course with the Tully name and connections there was suggestions that Celtic were interested but it never materialised although Brendan would have a stellar career in Irish league football with Bangor, Portadown and Donegal Celtic and a successful spell in the League of Ireland with Drogheda where they reached the cup final in 1976.

Ex Belfast Celtic great Jimmy McAlinden was the Manager and brought a group of Irish league players down ‘south’ when it was dangerous for nationalists to play at Windsor, the Oval, Seaview etc. Back in Belfast Brendan finished his career with Donegal Celtic who had taken on the mantle of a club wearing the hoops and the name ‘Celtic’, but old habits die hard, playing Linfield in the cup at Windsor, the Linfield crowd attacked the Celtic fans and the RUC fired rubber bullets, only at the Celtic fans on the kop, also a Linfield fan climbed on to the pitch and attacked Brendan, shades of 1948 all over again.

In 2021 a junior club had taken on the name of ‘Belfast Celtic’ again and are working their way through the divisions and hoping to create the great name again in Irish football in the Premier League, sadly the famous old stadium is no more and now a shopping centre, whether a club wearing the Hoops and called Celtic are any more acceptable in the 21st century remains to be seen?

As 15 year olds we used to slag Brendan about playing for Bangor, they were always a small club, we would play on a Saturday morning and then he would head for Bangor in the afternoon, it opened up a career in football for him, the only one of us to do so. I met ‘Uncle’ Charlie once when Bangor played Distillery and I went to the game with Brendan and he brought me into the dressing room afterwards and we chatted to the great man.

Sadly, only a few years later in 1971 Charlie died from a massive heart attack in his sleep, he was only 47, the darling of Paradise in the 1950’s, ‘cheeky’ Charlie was on his way to his own paradise. His funeral from his home in St James’s, just off the Falls and close to the old Celtic Park, was attended by thousands and the whole Celtic team who won the European Cup in Lisbon attended and walked behind the cortege as it moved along the Falls to Milltown, Jock Stein and Billy McNeill helped carry the coffin, British soldiers who were by then patrolling the street saluted as the cortege passed, maybe Royal Scots, possibly some were Celtic supporters from Glasgow?

A great player, a character, a genius with a ball, Charlie Tully was a true Celtic legend!

Paddy McMenamin was born in Belfast with Donegal and Tyrone parents. He spent the 70’s in Long Kesh. He has been going to Paradise since the Benfica game in Nov. 1969. He lived in Donegal for 30 years but now lives in Galway. He returned to University at 50 and became a secondary school teacher of history and English.

IT IS NOW TIME TO DUST OURSELVES DOWN

I got home from Dortmund on Wednesday evening after a great away trip meeting up with friends from around the globe who made the journey. Everything was great until kick off time. Planes, Trains and Automobiles all on time. We had a great night in Dusseldorf meeting up with friends for drinks, a catch up and a singsong.

I arrived at the stadium early on match day and settled into a bar close to the turnstiles. The home fans were welcoming, and the bar was not a rip off for food and drinks. There was no hassle at the turnstiles and the Police kept a low profile. (Although the next day on social media I saw the video of the Celtic fan who was wrestled to the ground by several heavy-handed Police officers for having a Palestine flag.)

After not getting into the game against Lazio last season I made sure I was inside in plenty of time. On the concourse both sets of fans mixed with each other before going into their own sections.

My ticket was for section 60 and come kick off time, the terrace was overcrowded but everyone was in good form and the buildup to kick off could have been better. Murdo and Paul Lambert were on the pitch before kickoff getting interviewed. Celtic fans were in full voice and when the stadium filled up the atmosphere was as good as any away game I have been at.

The famous Dortmund fans in the Yellow Wall lived up to expectations with a UEFA MAFIA banner while in the away end Celtic fans from the Green Brigade highlighted the plight of the Palestine People. The T-Shirt Protest reminded me of the SACK THE BOARD protest at Celtic Park back in the 1990’s.

Both clubs will likely be fined by UEFA. Dortmund for the banners and Celtic for the clever protest and the flares. YNWA was special before the game kicked off. Maeda’s equalizer was the only highlight for the travelling fans, and we got soaked with beer as we celebrated the goal. It was all downhill after that.

By now you will have digested the game, the performance, how good the home team were, how easily Celtic gave the ball away. You will have read the match reports, listened to the post match interviews and watched the highlights of the game back.

It is now time to dust ourselves down. Celtic must now bounce back on Sunday away to Ross County. The Celtic Fans will travel up North by the bus loads and will be there to cheer on the Bhoys once again. After a difficult few days for Brendan Rodgers, he picked up the Manager of the month for September.

Adam Idah picked up goal of the month for his goal v St. Johnstone last week. It will be interesting to see if he gets the nod to start and what changes the manager will make. Celtic should be too strong for the home team, and I expect them to continue their impressive start to the domestic season.

Andrew Milne is Editor of More than 90 Minutes