In every sense of the word, John Mulrooney was an entertainer. Off the field, he was a comedian and a singer, so much so that he earned the nickname “Caruso” after the great Italian operatic tenor Enrico Caruso. His entertaining skills were much in demand when Celtic were on their intensive midweeks away at Seamill Hydro or elsewhere, or when on tour in the summer of 1912. He had a natural comedian’s face, and he had the rare ability to wiggle his large protruding ears to the delight of children and old ladies. But he was also not a bad goalkeeper
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Before becoming a full time professional, he had been a miner in Lanarkshire and played junior football for Earnock Rovers. At Celtic, he was considered to be good enough to follow in the footsteps of Davy Adams, and played his first game against Queen’s Park at Hampden on December 9 1911 (a week after Patsy Gallacher had made his debut) and impressed them well enough to keep his place all that season, including the 1912 Scottish Cup final against Clyde. He kept a clean sheet on a very windy day and Celtic’s 2-0 victory was enough to give him a Cup winner’s medal, and to make sure that Mulrooney, McNair and Dodds entered into Celtic folklore.
In these days, the habit of a goalkeeper wearing a separate coloured jersey was not yet mandatory, and sometimes John wore a different coloured jersey from the rest of the team and sometimes he just proudly donned the hoops. But he did wear a different jersey on the Scandinavian tour of 1912 in the game against the Norway Olympic XI. Someone had given Jimmy Quinn a woollen white jersey with shamrocks on it. Mulrooney asked if he could wear it, and Jimmy, always ready to oblige, said yes.
Season 1912/13 was not so good for John. He was blamed for some goals, and he suffered from rheumatism. When Charlie Shaw was signed in summer 1913, John had to go (Charlie was in all truth a better goalkeeper) and John found himself playing (with distinction) for St Johnstone in season 1913/14.
On Monday July 27, 1914 (when the Austro-Hungarians had already declared war on Serbia, but very few people as yet saw any need for a major World War) John Mulrooney died suddenly at his house in Hamilton. The cause was given as heart failure, a condition possibly not unconnected with his treatment for rheumatism. Those who had played with him were absolutely devastated, but he had established for himself his little corner of Celtic history.
Born in 1948, David Potter first saw Celtic at Dens Park, Dundee in March 29. It was a 3-5 defeat, which equipped him admirably for the horrors of the early 1960’s. He had “followed” Celtic for a few years before that and recalls having been called upon to impersonate Jock Stein and receive the family silver teapot which had to do for the Scottish Cup as it was presented on April 24 1954, after he and his father had spent a nerve wracking afternoon listening to the radio! Since then, he has “followed” every Celtic game with bated breath, and has written extensively about the club in magazines and books. His favorite team was that of 1969 (which he rates marginally better than 1967) and his favorite player was Henrik Larsson. His ambition for Celtic is for them to keep on winning silver in Scotland and to be something in Europe once again. His other interests are cricket and drama. He is 70, a retired teacher of Classical Languages, married with three children and five grandchildren. He now travels on the Joseph Rafferty bus from Kirkcaldy. He also loves Forfar Athletic.
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