PETER Lawwell will know that such is the relationship between Celtic and Rangers that he cannot make a joke at the expense of his rivals from across the city without there being a reaction, especially a bad joke, especially a joke that plays to the galleries and is a little cringe-making for a man in his lofty position in the Scottish game. By the sounds of it, there was much talk about Rangers at the Celtic agm on Friday. A question from the floor about why so many still call them Rangers, another question about why Rangers were given their licence to play after the tumult of summer 2012 and yet another about whether Celticâs assets were owned by the club, the inference being that Rangersâ assets are not. This one was answered by Ian Bankier, the chairman, in a way that summoned up an image of John Brown outside Ibrox and his âShow us the deedsâ speech. All of this jolly japery might have gone well with some Celtic supporters but it will only have reinforced the view in the minds of their counterparts across the city that a chunk of the Celtic fanbase are obsessed with Rangers (and vice versa). When the Parkhead agm contains so many references to the blue side of Glasgow then you can see their point down Ibrox way. Obsessed? Lawwell had a chance to kill that charge stone dead when asked about the Rangers new club/old club saga. He could have said: âThatâs got nothing to do with us, we are Celtic and weâre doing very well thank you very much.â Only he didnât say that. He said that âRory Bremner can pretend to be Tony Blairâ meaning that the Rangers we see now is only imagining itself to be the Rangers of the past 140 years. It was so unnecessary and Rangers have complained, inevitably. Their support will have demanded, in thunderous union, that the complaint be lodged and Lawwell will have expected it. Heâs been around too long to believe that his âwee bit of humourâ defence was going to be accepted at face value among Rangers people. This stuff is toxic. The question of Rangers â new club or old â is one that gets under the skin of most fans at Ibrox and Lawwell knows it only too well. Once he said what he said he would have known what was coming next. The thing is, Lawwell is no longer just the chief executive of Celtic, he is now on the professional game board (PGB) of the Scottish FA, a double-act that makes him one of the most â if not the most â powerful man in the domestic game. When he pokes fun at Rangersâ identity he does rather call into question his role on the PGB, a body that is supposed to above such petty squabbling. A few weeks ago he said that if it ever felt compromised in an SFA vote about Rangers â he was talking specifically about Dave Kingâs mooted application to become a director of the club â then he would consider stepping out of the room and playing no part in proceedings. In the minds of Rangers people, his Rory Bremner gag might confirm that Lawwell will always be compromised on anything to do with Rangers and, frankly, you can see their point. There is another aspect to this, too. Lawwell wants Rangers back in the Premiership, not because he cares about what happens at Ibrox but because it would be commercially beneficial for Celtic. And when they do get back, and when Sky or BT get ready to up their investment in the Scottish game because the Old Firm derby is once again on their horizon, will Lawwell talk of Rory Bremner then? Will he say to TV partners: âLads, put away your wallets, this is not the same Rangers, the Old Firm game is dead. Theyâre only an imitation act over there at Ibrox. Donât bother giving us more money.â No, he wonât. Lawwell seems to have an adaptable view of Rangers. Depending on who is acting the question, theyâre either the same Rangers or new Rangers. He seems to flip-flop between two entirely different positions. All the headlines, post agm, have been about the Rory Bremner joke, which is unfortunate, because there was a far more interesting section of the meeting on Friday, a topic that was written about by my colleague, Andrew Smith, in yesterdayâs Scotsman. It was to do with the resolution that sought support for âtaking all necessary stepsâ to make the club a living wage employer, thereby ensuring that all staff are paid at the very least £7.45 an hour instead of the minimum wage of £6.31. This resolution was shot down by the Celtic board, who said that it would cost them too much money, about £500,000. All you hear from Celticâs top brass is how well they are doing financially on the back of Champions League success and player sales so to come the poor mouth as soon as somebody raises the issue of paying their workers an extra £1.14 an hour is a bit much. Especially since they had earlier trumpeted that no club took their responsibilities to the community more seriously than Celtic while also saying charity and fairness was in the clubâs DNA. Cue video of the Brother Walfrid story. Brother Walfrid was an inspirational force for good, but as Smith pointed out yesterday: âIf you know your history when it comes to Celtic⦠it will not be lost on you that his [Walfridâs] vision was sold out within ten years, when the club became a plc, stopped making charity donations of any note and started paying fat dividends to directors⦠Walfrid later distanced himself from what the club became.â It might suit Lawwell to get himself embroiled in the Rory Bremner situation because the alternative would be that more attention might be paid to the rejection of the living wage resolution, âone of the grubbiest and divisive decisions made by a Celtic boardâ, according to Jeanette Findlay, chair of the Celtic Trust. Findlay has, it seems, much support from fellow fans on the issue. And that is to their credit. Their passionate arguments have been drowned out by this Rory Bremner affair. Itâs sad, but this is the way of things between Celtic and Rangers. How embarrassing if the SFA have to sanction the newest member of its professional game board for an avoidable cheap shot a veritable five minutes after his appointment. Findlay, and others, would argue that the real mortification can be found elsewhere, however.
He's been slightly more astute slightly more often than the rest of them though. He hates the MSM tag but will then go and **** things up with unsubstantiated unsupported ****e.... Same as the rest of them. He writes things that are opinion in one paragraph and then become fact in the next. He's done it in that piece there. Lawwell wants "Rangers back" in the top flight..... Really? We assume this is the case, but Tom English tells us it definitely is... Based on what? He then tells us Lawwell flip flops on the new club depending on who he is talking to....really? Again, we assume this would be is position as it would make sense to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds.... But what do we know? We know he made a joke apparently in reference to the new rangers pretending to be the same club as old Rangers. We don't know what English claims that Lawwell thinks and does is actually what Lawwell thinks and does. It is a piece typical of the man that works on the assumption that he KNOWS what Lawwell thinks.... And he's a **** too. The living wage thing could have been a piece on its own. He could have used fact there..... He didn't. If we are happy to assume the presumptions are correct, then fine. But it isn't great journalism. It's a lazy opinion piece...some of which I happen to agree with.
Anti-Celtic bias from a foaming-at-the-mouth rabid MSM intent on destroying Celtic and the Celtic Family's past, present and future by deliberately holding us back with skewed reports, despicable lies and horrible untruths. The Scotsman is a hun paper with overt Protestant leanings and it's no surprise this is the level of reporting that gets churned out on an almost daily basis due to bitter hacks resentful of Celtic's Catholic roots and years of success. This calls for one of my mum's bed sheets to be defaced with some kind of poorly constructed and grammatically poor threatening message which several of us can stand behind as we march to Hampden and to The Scotsman offices so that we can let our feelings be truly felt. I will also continue to not pay my license fee
Again, if we are talking about low and pathetic point scoring, they invited Juventus to use their training ground to prepare against us in a last 16 Champions League game 9 months ago. A verbal jibe is nothing.
Just been listening to sportsound extra on iplayer, Spiers is in for it, says rangers are a new club .... and says it several times, he`s in big trouble now
Weren't these same hacks telling us a year or so ago that there would be no TV deal? Now they're going with the increased revenue argument. "There'll be no TV deal if Rangers are booted out of the SPL" Rangers get booted out. Sky/BT step in with a new TV deal. "There'll be more money when Rangers get back to the SPFL" Why?
Celtic v Rangers = big viewing figures. If Rangers make it Premiership, then you can bet the current Sky deal will be re-broked.
You can argue that the Old Firm is dead… However, it will be marketed as such. And the rivalry between the two teams on the park has not died. Celtic fans still want Rangers to get beat(and vice versa), so based on this, Celtic v Rangers in the Premiership orScottish cup = big bucks!
Why? They said that without Rangers we would have no new TV deal. Rangers die and, lo and behold, we get a new TV deal. The money we got when Rangers were in the SPL was ****e and it'll be just as ****e if and when they get back. Let's not start falling for this "Scottish fitba is worse off without Rangers" bullshit again.
I never said "Scottish fitba is worse off without Rangers", however, if you believe that the top league wouldn't be more attractive to TV companies with 4 "Old Firm" games a season for them to market, then I''d have say....BULLSHIT!
Based on that, then scottish football will also be in a better position to re-broke the current deal... And with BT flexing their muscle over football/sport, it would put the SPFL in a strong posistion to open up bidding.
As I said, we got a **** deal when Rangers were in the SPL. The new deal was no worse. Explain your logic for thinking having them back will make a difference? The proof of history isn't in your favour Pud.