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CHEERIO 10 IN A ROW…15 YEARS ON

Articles >> Season 2012-2013

It’s 15 years now, on the 9th of May, since Celtic faced Saint Johnstone in the last game of season 1997/98. The maths was easy. A victory for Celtic would land them their first league title in…

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Saving Scottish Football - Aberdeen and the Catastrophic Reign of Stewart Milne

Articles >> Season 2012-2013

Throughout the season, comment has been made on the missing thousands at Celtic Park with the media telling us it’s because thousands of us miss Rangers.  I…

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Oh no! Not 10 in a row!

Articles >> Season 2012-2013

Recent Celtic games have heard the fans singing loudly - ‘Here we go 10 in a row!’ - after Celtic sealed their second consecutive SPL title under Neil Lennon. And the opportunity is certainly there to make…

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Hampden - The great White Elephant

Articles >> Season 2012-2013

Like many I have been greatly exorcised by the league reconstruction debate of late and the perceived lost opportunities to make the structure more exciting and move away from the current flawed split.  As highlighted…

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The Celtic Transfer Experiment - Ready For Phase Two

Articles >> Season 2012-2013

In the days and weeks following our game in Turin, I was quite surprised by the sense of despondency among some Celtic supporters. I remember reading a number of…

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The Bhoy in the Picture - Dixie Deans PDF Print E-mail
Written by St Anthony   
Monday, 07 June 2010 19:29
A few years back I was working in a small office manned by two persons, me and a younger female. One day I had to deal with an enquiry at the counter and I recognised the face of the man in front of me. It took me a few seconds to register and then I blurted out – ‘You’re Dixie Deans !’
It has to be said it was a trifle embarrassing, a forty something man like myself behaving like a star struck schoolboy and I had to explain to my younger colleague why I was so impressed but it is a bit better than a friend of mine, who upon meeting Dixie, told him that he still had a photo of him on his bedroom wall. And he was in his twenties at the time.
John ‘Dixie’ Deans was only at Parkhead for five years but made a huge impression during that time. Despite being on the small side Dixie was ‘Larssonesque’ in the air when timing his headers and scored many goals this way and also had a physical presence which he put to good use and defenders hated playing against. Had Celtic not lost to Partick in the 1971 League Cup final then Dixie might never have been a Celt. Jock Stein felt after that game that Celtic needed more purpose up front and Dixie was procured for a small fee from Motherwell.
His Celtic career was a mixture of highs and lows although there were certainly far more highs. Dixie is well remembered for his achievements but, sadly, also for missing a certain penalty.
Picture the scene: A European semi final with Inter Milan has finished goal less over two legs and the game goes to penalties in front of a packed Celtic Park, the prize being a place in the final in Belgrade against the great Cruyff inspired Ajax team. As any Celtic fan will testify Dixie missed his kick and out Celtic went by 5-4. Painful doesn’t even begin to describe it although as it happens I don’t think we would have beaten Ajax but with Johnstone, Macari, Dalglish and Deans in the side we would have appreciated the opportunity of trying.
Part of my fascination with Dixie is that I was at an impressionable age when he was Celtic’s number 9. No squad numbers in those days and the number 9 then was expected to be in position to score goals and not to ‘run the channels’ or wander the field aimlessly a la Fortune and Samaras of the current crop. In those days Celtic players were expected, if not demanded, to give their all for the privilege of pulling on the green and white and few players surpassed Dixie for effort.
He had a wonderful on field relationship with a young Kenny Dalglish but was equally comfortable partnering Macari, Hood or Lennox. In November 1973 Celtic thrashed Partick Thistle by 7-0 which was a notable result considering Thistle had  a decent side then, including Alan Rough, John Hansen and Ronnie Glavin. Dixie scored six of Celtic’s goals that day and but for Rough’s heroics in goal he could have surpassed the great McGrory’s record of eight goals in a game from 1928.
However you cannot have an article on Deans without mentioning his record against Hibs. The Easter Road men also had a fine side in those days but Dixie scored an impressive 18 goals against them in 13 games bearing in mind that sides only played each other twice in those pre Premier League days.
It’s well documented that shortly after the Inter Milan disappointment he scored a hat trick against Hibs in Celtic’s 6-1 thumping of Hibs in the 1972 Scottish Cup final. His goals were all impressive efforts but the main recollection is of Dixie performing a spontaneous cartwheel after his third effort which led kids all around the country trying to copy him for months afterwards.
In October 1974 Celtic faced Hibs twice in seven days in two important fixtures. In the first game in the League at Parkhead Celtic had walloped them 5-0 making them overwhelming favourites to win at Hampden in the League Cup final a week later. Despite noises made in the press by various Hibs players on how they had assembled a system to stop him, it was all to no avail as the bold Dixie cracked in another hat trick in a memorable 6-3 victory. His third goal that day was spectacular, a flying header to divert an aimless Jimmy Johnstone volley, giving Dixie another opportunity to perform the obligatory cartwheel on the Hampden turf and the papers to again churn out the headline: ‘Dixie – Hammer of the Hibs’. Dixie was actually a headline writer’s dream and I can recall ‘That old Dixie melody’, and ‘They’ll never drive old Dixie down’, being used regularly from his Celtic days.
If Dixie was prolific against Hibs then he was somewhat impotent when it came to scoring against Rangers. Arguably he scored once at Ibrox in 1973 when his thumping volley was diverted past Peter McCloy by the Rangers’ defender Dave Smith. The shot was on target and these days a striker could claim such a goal easily but at that time harsh judgement was shown and most people recorded it as a Smith own goal. For such a prolific scorer he had a poor record against Rangers although so too did Joe McBride so he is in good company. He would have scored in the cup final of 1973 against Rangers when he was only foiled by a save on the goal line by John Greig that Gordon Banks would have been proud of.
There was disappointment in 1974 when Dixie was left out of the Scotland squad for the World Cup finals in West Germany. He had made the initial 40 man squad but is said to have narrowly missed the final cut of 22. Curiously, Donald Ford of Hearts and an ageing Denis Law were taken in the squad and it’s felt that Dixie could have brought more to the table than either of those two. He was eventually capped in late 1974 in a 3-0 win against East Germany and then appears to have been a victim of the 2-1 defeat against Spain, when Billy Bremner missed a penalty, as that was his second and last cap.
There was sadness when he left Parkhead in 1976 for Luton Town and he was eventually to achieve cult status in Australia with Adelaide City with whom he played for four seasons.
In 1979 Adelaide played Sydney City who had a defender called Kevin Mullen rated the toughest in the Aussie league. With his side two nil down Dixie went into overdrive and rattled in a hat trick to give his side a memorable 3-2 victory and destroyed Mullen in the process. My Australian contact tells me that Dixie wasn’t entirely fearless….apparently he has a great fear of spiders and was in a constant state of paranoia down under that big hairy spiders might attack him at any time which was a great source of amusement to his Adelaide team mates.
Dixie lost his front teeth for the Celtic cause and photos of the period show him celebrating goals with that typical toothless grin. He was one of those players who took great joy in scoring goals and loved to celebrate with the Celtic fans with whom he had such a wonderful rapport. The fans took to him immediately and appreciated his efforts on field and it was said that he was quite a character off the park as well which endeared him even further to the supporters.
Dixie Deans was a top class striker and is an all time Celtic great.
Pic 1 is from Goal magazine 1971.
Pic 2 shows Evan Williams salute Dixie after the ’72 final.
Pic 3 is a front cover from Shoot magazine 1972 with Colin Jackson.
Pic 4 is from Shoot 1974.
Pic 5 is from Goal magazine 1973.
Pic 6 shows Dixie celebrate after scoring the first goal in Celtic’s 2-0 win at Easter Road in January 1975. Look at the size of the crowd and the dodgy TV gantry above the terracing !
Pic 7 shows Dixie on his Scotland debut in 1974.
Pic 8 is a pic from Scottish football weekly in 1974.

deans1A few years back I was working in a small office manned by two persons, me and a younger female. One day I had to deal with an enquiry at the counter and I recognised the face of the man in front of me. It took me a few seconds to register and then I blurted out – ‘You’re Dixie Deans !’

It has to be said it was a trifle embarrassing, a forty something man like myself behaving like a star struck schoolboy and I had to explain to my younger colleague why I was so impressed but it is a bit better than a friend of mine, who upon meeting Dixie, told him that he still had a photo of him on his bedroom wall. And he was in his twenties at the time.

John ‘Dixie’ Deans was only at Parkhead for five years but made a huge impression during that time. Despite being on the small side Dixie was ‘Larssonesque’ in the air when timing his headers and scored many goals this way and also had a physical presence which he put to good use and defenders hated playing against. Had Celtic not lost to Partick in the 1971 League Cup final then Dixie might never have been a Celt. Jock Stein felt after that game that Celtic needed more purpose up front and Dixie was procured for a small fee from Motherwell.

His Celtic career was a mixture of highs and lows although there were certainly far more highs. Dixie is well remembered for his achievements but, sadly, also for missing a certain penalty.

 

 
Celtic Underground Podcast 93 - More Questions Than Answers PDF Print E-mail
Written by Eddie Pearson   
Saturday, 05 June 2010 13:48

podcast-badgeSt Anthony joins Eddie this week and together they take a look back to the recent Q&A session hosted at Celtic Park. They discuss the need for Neil Lennon to be appointed as soon as possible and they talk about the players the club have currently been linked with. As is always the case when it's a couple of the regulars from the website, they tend to meander and talk about all sorts of rambling nonsense for about an hour. Which when you consider the fact that next to nothing has changed in the past week is pretty impressive. Eddie finishes off by doing one of his infrequent monologues about stuff that isn't really all that important and has a pop at the recent good weather.

The feed for the podcast can be found here . Remember you can subscribe via itunes here .

Last Updated on Saturday, 05 June 2010 16:53
 
Top Ten Players of the Season - No 2: Boruc PDF Print E-mail
Written by rossi   
Wednesday, 02 June 2010 20:41

boruc_top_tenAs I write this piece I have no idea in what order we have picked our top ten players for the season. Of course you all will by the time you read this – Eddie has kept us in the dark you see. Or at least you will know numbers 10-2 and with that in mind, I would presume number one will not be difficult to work out. For my part I had Robbie Keane at Number 1, I can’t think of any player who made more of an impact/contribution to the season just finished. The fact that he was here for only 4 months of the season, is a damming indictment on the rest of the squad and, the fact he was unable to deliver the championship as was hoped, is certainly not something that can be laid at his door.

So Number 2 in our top ten is the player I had as number 3 in my top ten, the one and only Artur Boruc. Again a wee bit of a sorry reflection on our season, when Artur, who I regard as the best goalkeeper Celtic have had in my lifetime (I was born in 1967), has had a fairly unspectacular season by his standards, yet finds himself as second in our Top Ten players. 

 

Last Updated on Saturday, 05 June 2010 21:00
 
Top Ten Players of the Season - No 1: Keane PDF Print E-mail
Written by Korean Steve   
Thursday, 03 June 2010 22:26

7keano1-0When Eddie asked me for my opinion of the top ten players of the season, I took a deep breath and wondered if he was having a laugh, this season had the feel of “pre O’Neil” and I just wanted to forget, honestly you try and do a top ten, even a top five.  That said, although it’s hard to do a top ten, it’s certainly easy to pick the number one.

 

Robert David “Robbie” Keane joined Celtic on 1st February, welcomed by massed crowds outside Paradise, welcomed by massive interest on the forums (the day Kerrydale Street forum had a record number of online users) and welcomed by Jim Whites glum coupon on Sky Sports News,  this was a box office signing we’d all craved.

 

Before joining his boyhood heroes, Robbie played for Wolves, Coventry, Inter Milan, Leeds United, Spurs, Liverpool and the then back to Spurs scoring 145 goals in 406 games  At international level he’s scored 43 goals in 99 games (according to Wiki).  Every passing transfer window, since Henrik Larsson left the building, had a Robbie Keane rumour.  My view, like many, was that we missed the boat and circumstances and finances would rule out Robbie ever joining the Celts. (I read at the weekend he is the second most expensive player ever when using combined transfer values).  That changed on 1st February.

 

Last Updated on Saturday, 05 June 2010 20:58
 
1970 European Cup Revisited PDF Print E-mail
Written by The Dutchbhoy   
Wednesday, 02 June 2010 20:30
europeancupprogramme1970It is sometimes forgotten that Celtic played in two European Cup finals. Lisbon remains the iconic highpoint, with Milan consigned to the dustbin of history. There has always been a widely held view among Celtic supporters that Celtic lost to an inferior Dutch side. There are several good reasons to dispute this narrow version of what happened on that dark night in the San Siro.

There are some who contend that all the blame should be heaped on the shoulders of Jock Stein, who for once (in their opinion) sent out the wrong formation with a complacent attitude. They would argue that Celtic became victims of their hype after crushing Leeds in a mammoth “Battle of Britain”. Celtic had overcome Don Revie’s robots and the English press, to record a great victory in front of a massive crowd at Hampden Park. Nobody had heard of Feyenoord, and Holland was merely a place full of windmills and dykes. The outcome seemed preordained.

I watched Celtic play the Saturday before the game in Milan, and the portents were not good. Celtic lost a controversial Scottish Cup Final to Aberdeen in one of the most unfair games ever witnessed at Hampden. Bobby Davidson became a hate figure for his barely concealed bias against Celtic. However, even allowing for his disgraceful conduct, it was clear that Celtic were not firing on all cylinders. They had come to the end of a long hard season, and maybe as events were to prove, the final in Milan was one game too far.
 
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