Saturday 25 July 2009

Celtic turning on the style


By Joe McHugh
The emotions of being a Celtic fan were highlighted brilliantly at Wembley yesterday as Tony Mowbray's side gave the sort of performance that we've been waiting months/years to see.


Without kicking off a Mowbray-Strachan debate yesterday's 5-0 hammering of Egyptian side Al Ahly was basically achieved by the same players that couldn't score against Hibs or Hearts to hand cash-strapped Rangers the SPL title.


The despair of last season as we staggered from game to game without any confidence or pattern and regularly without goals was blown away as a team containing Lee Naylor and Massimo Donati demonstrated that they are certainly capable of better than they have shown over the last two seasons.


Only Marc-Antoine Fortune and Landry N'Guemo had been added to last season's side while Shunsuke Nakamura, Paul Hartley and Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink have moved on.


The actual players didn't seem so important yesterday, the most impressive feature was the movement, energy and confidence of players who had been running on empty last season and appeared demoralised at times.


Aiden McGeady and Shaun Maloney were the key players in the revamp.


Notionally given wide roles both players had licence to move inside, looking for the ball and creating chances as well as causing problems for defenders whilst opening up spaces for full-backs to explore.


Strachan's wide men were exactly that, wide players, fed the ball on the flank then expected to be creative with two markers in close pursuit.


That system did bring some success and had it's merits but there was always the feeling that we weren't getting the best out of Nakamura and McGeady while others also suffered in a team over reliant on two players.


With McGeady and Maloney happy to cut inside to link up with strikers Scott McDonald and Fortune there was openings for N'Guemo and Donati to exploit with full-backs Naylor and Andreas Hinkel both happy to exploit the space created.


Despite all the attacking options it was impossible to look beyond the contribution of Artur Boruc who although hardly in perfect shape demonstrated that natural instinct to pull off saves that ordinary 'keepers don't get near.


Holding back the optimism won't be easy, at least until the next match, but there was enough on show at Wembley to suggest that we might have a team making progress again and there's a good case for arguing that since the Champions League ties with AC Milan in 2007 the team hadn't been developing.


A win over Spurs to claim the Wembley Cup would be great, and hopefully an invite back for next season's event, but the only games that matter are those against Moscow Dynamo over the next ten days.


Ousting the Russians from the Champions League will be a major achievement and give the squad a much needed confidence boost for the season ahead.


The glasses are all half-full at the moment with hope and promise in the air, if these strange emotions continue then going to watch Celtic could suddenly become enjoyable again!

Tuesday 21 July 2009

Stewart Kerr VIDEO INTERVIEW

By Joe McHugh

Maybe it's an age thing or even a generation thing but it's always great to catch up with former players, players who were part of scenery around Celtic for a while but who suddenly disappear off the radar.


STEWART KERR VIDEO INTERVIEW (taken after losing the first Masters game to Dundee United)

Stewart Kerr is one of those mid-nineties sorta players, along with Simon Donnelly, Malky Mackay, Phil O'Donnell and Jackie McNamara they were all reasonably local, could relate to the supporters and were approachable about the job that they loved.

The Masters football event is becoming a sort of Friends Reunited diary date with Kerr making his Celtic debut this season and playing no small part in winning the trophy.

Playing in the tournament can be quite an eye-opener after watching on telly, especially for a goalkeeper with the crossbar at seven feet high and players blasting in shots from ten yards or less that you are expected to stop by whatever means.


UNFULFILLED
Kerr has a short and unfulfilled career but from the interview I had with him he's far from downhearted about the way things turned out realising early on that a back injury was never going to allow him to fulfill his potential.


Perhaps making his debut for the red-carded Gordon Marshall should have acted as a warning for Kerr but after getting his chance unexpectedly in November 1996 he went on to hold on to the his place for the remainder of the season.

At the end of that season Tommy Burns was dismissed and a regular summer season of appointing Celtic managers took place with Wim Jansen, Jo Venglos and John Barnes appointed before Martin O'Neill brought some stability to the job.

KHARINE
One of Jansen's first signings was Jonathan Gould who quickly established himself as first choice with Kerr as a reliable deputy, well certainly more reliable than Dimitrei Kharine who was one of Barnes more forgettable, and expensive signings.

Kerr finally moved on from Celtic in August 2001 to Wigan Athletic for £700,000 reflecting the potential that he carried as a Scotland under-21 keeper and five years experience in the Celtic squad.

Sadly back injuries caught up with him forcing his retirement a year after joining Wigan with just eight appearances to his name.

These days Kerr is back in Scotland working as Aidrie's goalkeeping coach and keeping in touch with former Celtic team-mates, replacing Packie Bonner in the recent Tommy Burns Tribute Match.

Monday 20 July 2009

Nine-in-a-row starts today


By Joe McHugh

Neil Lennon takes his first steps into management today when Celtic's reserve side faces Albion Rovers in the annual Jock Stein Friendship Cup.




The greatest manager that the game has ever known, who turned a team into European Cup winners in just over two years, will be celebrated when the two Scottish teams that he played for meet up at Cliftonhill.


For Lennon it's the next inevitable step in the management business after being the most decorated Celtic player of his generation.


Gordon Strachan brought Lennon back to Celtic in March 2008, less than a year after his playing career ended, as Celtic dramatically clinched the title on the final day of the specially extended season against Dundee United.


Being a No. 2 or No.3 can be either a cushy number or thankless task depending on results but it's important for an aspiring manager to establish himself independently rather than being forever associated as part of the furniture trailing around two steps behind 'the boss'.


SPECULATION

There was some speculation, probably well founded, that Lennon may not fit in with the new management team of Tony Mowbray, Mark Venus and Peter Grant with Stockport County interested in seeing if Lennon was ready to start off as a manager in his own right.


Retaining Lennon provides Mowbray with an insight into the current Celtic dressing room and the lowdown on SPL opponents which could be priceless in the early months of the season.


Lennon, like any former Celt involved in management, would love one day to become manager of the club but knows that that incredible honour is given to few and is never decided on sentiment with various factors, circumstances and timing deciding who gets the call to lead Celtic.


After more than a season as first team coach Lennon steps out as a manager today at Albion Rovers with the difficult task of managing the reserves in a very uncertain climate.


Even before the crash of Setanta there were threats against the Reserve League with short sighted clubs squealing about the costs of fielding a team for 22 games a season!


INVESTMENT

With all the supposed investment in youth football going on throughout the game it shouldn't be too much of a burden for clubs to arrange three games a month to field first team fringe players and the best of their emerging talents.


Celtic have made the Reserve League their own over the last eight seasons whilst also being the dominant force in first team football. Those facts are not accidental.


Providing a platform for frustrated or injured first team players to return to top team action and another stepping stone forward for youth prospects is the main priority of the reserve side. And winning.


Predicting the make up of the reserve team is virtually impossible with 40 plus players likely to be used over the season.


UJPEST

The better players are likely to be sent out on loan with Ujpest Dozsa a likely destination while we'll soon find out if Tony Mowbray is as keen as Gordon Strachan to loan players out in the SPL where Cillian Sheridan, Paul McGowan, Scott Cuthbert and Paul Caddis spent the second part of last season.


Jason Marr and Danny Lafferty stepped comfortably into reserve team football last season where they formed the backbone of the title winning side alongside Paddy McCourt and Mark Millar.


Marr and Lafferty should continue with the reserves whilst it may be time for Millar and McCourt to move out on loan at the end of August if they aren't in and around the first team, Niall McGinn and Koki Mizuno could also be in that position.


Lennon's task is to keep these players motivated knowing that in all honesty playing for the reserves isn't what is required at this stage of their career.


Anything beyond two season's of reserve team football is of little use to players or coaches, the journey forward begins today at Albion Rovers as the new season gets underway.