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Co-Efficient Tanks At Wright Gets It Wrong

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Scottish football fans ought to be raging with Tommy Wright today.

This is the guy who had a very public falling out with Celtic last month, with an incontinent rant about how we are partly to blame for the national co-efficient.

In point of fact, we’re guilty as charged.

Getting beaten by teams like Maribor is not acceptable.

But I’d say that it’s more than helped by results such as beating Barcelona.

His comments about winning away from home were a joke, but not as big a joke as his failure to decisively beat, at home, a team with ten men.

Our away record is truly dreadful, but our home form over the years has been excellent.

Rather than accept the truth in John Collins’ criticism, he decided to cast around some blame.

Last night, Collins’ assesment was proved right in spades.

Being knocked out of Europe by a team few of us have ever heard of is not unique to Tommy Wright and his team, though, and it’s a little unfair to single them out.

Had it not been for his comments this would have passed off as just another disastrous European reversal.

When Karagandy’s nearly knocked us out of Europe a few seasons back there were few amongst us who knew a thing about them.

Yet this one feels particularly significant.

Sooner or later Scottish clubs have to get their act together on the continent.

Aberdeen’s stumble last night, where they went through on away goals after a less than inspiring performance, was even more worrying, as they looked the part last year and were unlucky with the draws. I hope this isn’t the start of a worrying trend for them.

Our clubs go into Europe now with the wrong attitude. Even Celtic.

Our board, our manager, even our fans, make more of the negatives associated with Scottish football than they do with the positives.

We are set up to fail before a ball is even kicked because we don’t expect to do otherwise.

At Celtic Park the limit of our ambitions is now simply reaching the Groups.

We once aspired to so much more.

The odds are against us, but not impossibly so.

Yet there’s no excuse for a professional football club from Scotland failing to beat the team who finished fourth in the Armenian league, and when you consider that they played much of the second half against only ten men it becomes even more appalling.

Scottish clubs have to change their approach to European games.

They have to be more open-minded about playing attacking football, and they need to believe they can win these matches rather than meekly surrender in them.

The national team used to have the same, shocking attitude.

Gordon Strachan was able to sort that out, and very damned quickly, and we’ve reaped the benefits.

He’s got pretty much the same players his predecessors had, but he’s got more out of them than they’d ever dreamed.

Our club sides are run by pompous fools who are better at sniping at each other than they are at taking courageous decisions, and inspiring people.

The media seems to take results like last night on the chin, playing into this concept of our game as being inferior.

Inferior to Armenian football? Seriously?

Next week, Celtic takes on the Icelandic champions.

We are expected to win that game with something to spare, but after that the road ahead is a little more difficult.

But only comparatively.

We could face sides such as the champions of Belarus, Poland or Slovenia.

The last two are particularly notable as it’s sides from these football countries that beat us last year.

We ought to be confident of beating those teams, as St Johnstone should have been confident last night, as Aberdeen should have been, as our other European sides in years to come should.

As long as we continue to expect defeat, to treat European football as something we should be honoured just to take part in, then these are the results our club sides will continue to endure long into the future.

I want to see Scottish sides do well.

I suspect most of us do.

Tommy Wright’s ridiculous comments, apportioning equal blame to Celtic for the state of the Scottish co-efficient, have to be seen in the context of last night’s scandalous defeat.

If he and others got their own act together then debates like this would be moot.

Dwelling on a handful of past results, talking about how they won away from home (usually against dreck) as if it excuses this kind of display is a sheer nonsense.

It was a deplorable result, the sort that is simply unforgivable.

The blame for all this spreads in so many directions it’s a waste of time and energy trying to lay them at one particular door or another …

But victory starts in the head and that’s the first thing we have to get right.

Calling this result what it is – an unpardonable disgrace – and refusing to tolerate or accept it is as good a place to start as any.

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  • Joe says:

    Well well! As Billy Connolly used to say, “BANG, and his mouth was shut”
    What a plonker!

  • Larsson7 says:

    Remember the St Johnstone players who did not clap Celtic on to the park after we had won the 2013-2014 season,Scobie,Frazer Wright,and others,no time for them.

  • G.riley says:

    I went to the saints game last night as I live in Perth . To be honest they where both poor and Wright got all it all wrong it was a poor game and £27 to get in it was a rip off . Saints should be ashamed , I happy to support Scottish football but that was poor last night. 1step up from the women’s World Cup

  • Therese Marie Storrie says:

    This is an example of sour grapes and lets all get a dig at Celtic Hes talking rubbish as we are the only team from Scotland to bump up the co-efficient but, as Billy Connolly would also say- not a fuck was given

  • The Silver Fhox says:

    Wright’s bosses should be worried at his lack of ability to accept and act on criticism.
    John Collins’ comments were not wide of the mark and are meant as a challenge. This should have been a spur. The problem is, some people don’t want a challenge.

    Wright sounds as if he would make a good politician in any one of the Unionist parties.
    Spin and deflection are the words of the day with him. What the hell is he doing for his salary?
    He has not taken St Johnstone forward, as should have happened.

  • Charlie says:

    know this is not related to the article but could there be more trouble ahead for The Rangers? This was on their website;
    Fans Snap Up Season Tickets
    RANGERS fans were out in force this morning as the season ticket general sale began for the 2015/15 campaign under new manager Mark Warburton.
    Liquidation before the year’s out?

  • Jim says:

    Maybe we should wait to see how we get on against the Icleandic mob before we take a pop at Wright 🙂

  • Terra says:

    Totally agree, we should also expand the top two tiers of the league to make it more competative, exciting and popular as a result. That along with some kind of hybrid summer football would leave our teams in a much better position when Euro games come along.
    Of course, like you said teams, managers, still have to go out looking to play and win. Not give up before a ball is even kicked. St Johnstone actually did not too badly in their home game, it was the first fixture in Armenia that screwed them, Wright set his team out to allow them the ball, soak up any resultant pressure and hoof it up from defence when they got it…deplorable.

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