Celtic Fans Didn’t Give Lennon Half The Stick The Mooch Is About To Get At Ibrox.

Soccer Football - Scottish Premiership - Rangers v Celtic - Ibrox, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain - January 2, 2021 Celtic manager Neil Lennon REUTERS/Russell Cheyne

Andrew Smith has written some excellent stuff in the last couple of years, but he has also written stuff with which I have profoundly disagreed and he’s been the subject of a couple of these articles over the years. I don’t totally disagree with the article he put up last night on how The Mooch could become Ibrox’s Neil Lennon … except I kind of do.

For starters, let’s not even pretend that these men should be mentioned in the same breath. You will find few bigger or more vocal critics of Neil Lennon than me. It’s gotten me into plenty of trouble over the years. There are a lot of people who think that Lennon has been harshly judged, and I can tell that Smith is one of them. I am not.

The opportunity to manage Celtic should not have come near Neil Lennon either time he got the job. He had done nothing whatsoever to deserve such a momentous post. He was a youth team coach who was elevated to the manager’s seat by circumstances. During his initial interim period, he lost to a First Division team in the Scottish Cup.

That should have precluded him from ever getting the gig on a permanent basis. Celtic gave it to him anyway. No effort whatsoever was made to find someone more qualified for the gig. He came close to being sacked the following season and should have been when we failed to win the title. He was 45 minutes from it a year later. Then Rangers collapsed.

I think Lennon was a poor manager the first time around. He left when he did because the board never seriously backed him, but perhaps the reason they never did was that they harboured grave misgivings about his suitability for the role.

Every one of their doubts was fully justified. He proved it at Bolton and then at Hibs and so I don’t want to talk about his second time in the job.

There are people at Celtic Park who ought never to be forgiven for that disgraceful decision and I no longer need to justify my fury at it to anybody. So I will not be re-litigating it.

I’ll say only that my anger, and that of many, many fellow fans had nothing do with seeing Lennon as “too downmarket”. We saw very clearly that someone who had been sacked by Bolton and Hibs, and especially when the latter involved a full-scale melt-down of half the club, should never have been trusted with the awesome responsibility of running Celtic.

It was a matter of time before he pressed the self-destruct button on our own dressing room and that night after Ferencvaros when he threw the whole team under the bus to cover for his own dire tactical and selection decisions it was obvious there was only one direction of travel. The collapse was rapid and he should have been terminated way before he was.

The Mooch has done nothing whatsoever to merit being the manager at Ibrox. A handful of games in charge of QPR? Celtic fans were overjoyed with that appointment and we continue to be. That appointment was, and remains, a bad joke and Ibrox fans who were opposed to it are no more wrong about it than we were about Lennon.

But that’s where the similarity ends. Lennon won things. Lennon did things that earned him – yes, earned him – a place in the history of this club. He is a title winning captain and manager, and there are a handful of them. But a treble winning captain and manager, there is only one of those and that is him, and that is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future.

The Mooch has won nothing. Not as a player, or as a manager. His shameless efforts to appropriate, for himself, the No Fans Title which Gerrard won would be the same as if John Kennedy tried to claim the credit for all the work Lennon and Ange did. Nothing will make that title his success. Assistant managers don’t get to do that, and the media allows him to try it anyway. It’s just embarrassing for them, it really is.

Neil Lennon, until the day he left Celtic, had a significant section of the support in his corner. I actually thought that quite unbelievable at times. I thought the personality cult – for that’s what in my view it was – surrounding him went on way too long … and yet for all that I understand the reasons why it existed in the first place.

Celtic fans have a tremendously complicated relationship with Neil Lennon, and we all know why. For years, years beyond counting, Celtic fans were the only reliable allies that man had left and as long as he lives there will be many, many in his corner. You know what? I will be one of them in terms of who he is as a man, as I always have been.

He should never have managed our club but he’s part of it and it is part of him and so this support is part of him. And so The Mooch will never be their Neil Lennon because what support there is for him at their club is neither wide nor deep. He is not a club icon nor a former player, just a guy who brass necked his way into the gig and knocked another guy out of his way to get it.

His conduct in getting it was dire. His behaviour since getting it has been abysmal. He has stoked the hatreds at his club and fed its supremacist notions until the fans are simply unwilling to tolerate any scenario where they play second best … but that’s what they are and that’s what they will be as long as people like him are there.

He is going to eat more dirt than Lennon ever did. He is going to become a victim of the very flames he has been fanning. One of the things Ange did right in coming to Celtic was that he immediately established a rapport with people because of his warmth and his openness. The Mooch has played into every ugly Ibrox archetype.

And without significant success he is doomed. If we win at the weekend he’s already on the downslope towards his sacking.

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