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Hibs Cannot Possibly Be Daft Enough To Follow Celtic In Hiring Lennon A Second Time.

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In an internet age which is stacked wall to wall with written dreck, where you come across things recommended by others, check them out and think “meh”, it is a genuine pleasure to read something that is original, witty and brilliant, and this morning I read a superb thread on Twitter by a Hibs fan comparing his club’s previous bosses to … hard drugs.

There is genius in this on so many levels, not least of which is that it leans knowingly, with a nod and a wink, into Trainspotting stereotype and the way their club is mocked by other fans whose clubs don’t have an ounce of history or tradition or passion. I’ve got a soft spot for Hibs, as everyone who reads this blog regularly will be aware, having shared a flat with two mad Hibs boys during university and having dated at least one Hibs supporting girl since.

You can read the thread here; I highly recommend it. This is what I love about the internet; amidst all the rest of it there are little flashes of insight and genius like this.

Of our previous manager, Neil Lennon, the writer wrote this; “Neil Lennon was ecstasy- popped at the right time it filled us with euphoria, togetherness and fearless swagger, the party lasted quite a while, but near the end the comedown was rough and left us in a slowing down malaise … stop at the right time and you’re fine …”

This is an example of how insightful that is amidst the comedy.

Because had Neil Lennon been “stopped at the right time” all would have been fine and he would have left our own club as a genuine hero who would have earned the thanks of every fan.

When was the right time? Right after guiding us through the aftermath of the Rodgers departure. Had he gotten us through that season and then walked, declined the longer offer and left to pursue his career elsewhere there is not a Celtic fan who would not be singing his name until the end of time. Because that would have been incredible.

One of the greatest heroes of the Roman Republic was Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus.

He was a former patrician turned simple farmer, living off the land, when the Senate asked him to take dictatorial power for a short time to fend off a crisis involving two rival Italian factions.

He was initially given absolute authority for six months; he made several appointments to key military positions, formed an army, relieved the besieged forces of the consul Quintus Fabius Vibulanus and restored Rome’s pre-eminent position in just 15 days.

On day 16, he gave up the dictatorship willingly and went back to his farm.

This is cited by modern historians as one of the greatest examples of civic responsibility and virtuous leadership of all time.

To walk away from absolute power and to hand it back to those who granted it to you as if it was nothing at all … it’s awesome.

And Lennon, who took over the most important job at Celtic when we could have been spiralling downward, could have been remembered just like that had he stepped back when that season ended.

But there is a streak of egotism and arrogance in Lennon which will not allow him to do that. In fact, he didn’t come in to play the heroes role in the first place, although people like to make out that he did.

We plucked Lennon off a dole queue and rather than be grateful for that he made it clear he would take the job only if he was made the front-runner at the end of the campaign. And our board, which should have waved him cheerio for even daring make that demand, agreed to it instead.

Let me quote you the man who knows. Lawwell, after the Cup final. “We had approaches from many, many agents, many representatives of managers across the board. We put them in the file, just left it and kept our word to Neil, really.”

And that echoes what I wrote earlier about these people living in a sealed bubble listening to only their own voices. During that same interview, Lawwell said this; “(Honestly), I’ve said hundreds of times, you need blinkers in this job. And if you react to online, or social media, or media, then you’re dead. You just need to keep on doing the right things and believe in yourself and making the right decisions. That’s what we’ve done – without any outside influences.”

It’s all there for those who want to see it. The proof of how narrow are the range of views this board considers, and Lennon’s own basic selfishness. It was an act of utter folly for those people to have given him that job a second time … surely nobody in football, knowing Lennon’s range of weaknesses, would ever do that?

Well, they did. And now Lennon wants to return to Hibs, and that he reckons he has a chance of ending up there genuinely does make me laugh.

I want Lennon in a management job, and soon. Because he has way too much time on his hands, and more and more he spends it poking his nose into the business of our club.

it is infuriating to see him sit on that sofa alongside Peter Martin and others and offer his unwanted and unwelcome opinions on stuff going on with Celtic.

He has no business doing that and he’d be damned well pissed off if another ex-Celtic manager had undermined him in that way. Maybe he and Rodgers don’t see eye to eye, I don’t know, I just know that I genuinely wish he’d keep his mouth shut.

But think of the arrogance without borders that you need to believe that the club which fired you in spectacular fashion because you had caused a meltdown behind the scenes would ever even consider you for a return.

That he’s publicly put his name forward as a candidate for the Easter Road gig is mind-boggling. You wonder which planet he’s getting in from that he doesn’t realise that this is a preposterous idea, about as realistic as the plot of a Transformers movie.

Hibs fans, and especially the one who wrote that thread this morning, get that Lennon is to be taken in small doses only, because long term exposure does the predictable damage.

Those who run the club certainly do not need reminders of what it was like. Everywhere he’s been he’s left angry fans, angry directors, angry players and a trail of destruction behind him.

This is a guy whose managerial career has been spectacularly unspectacular outside of two spells at Celtic Park, where The Brains Trust gave him responsibilities he ought never to have had.

Because is not a good manager, he was just a very well-resourced one at Parkhead and able to outspend his opponents and rival bosses by a significant margin. When asked to work in more restricted surroundings he’s been a disaster.

He had never held a job in management before he was at Celtic, and the only club willing to take a punt on him after his first time in the gig was Bolton. That ended chaotically, and this Hibs board – no geniuses themselves when it comes to picking managers – should not have gone near him.

His career after Celtic Park? A brief spell in Cyprus. Not Serie A. Cyprus.

Which is an indication as to how the rest of football sees him.

Are those inside the Parkhead boardroom getting it yet?

Literally no-one else in football thinks this guy should be in a major management gig, and yet they’ve hired him twice. Is that not enough to make you doubt your own judgement, and maybe even your sanity with it?

I really doubt that Hibs will make the same mistake.

They are way too smart over there for that, and as bad as their next appointment is likely to be – just given the history, you can see it a mile away – this is a step too far even for them.

They have more sense than our custodians do.

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  • Thomas Davidson says:

    Neil Lennon’s departure from Hibs was sudden, and unexplained properly. Was there an incident or incidents on the training ground? Was Florian Kamberi involved? What did Neil Lennon do to justify his almost instantaneous departure? Should he be allowed to manage a football team ever again? And would someone please keep him off the airwaves?

  • Kevan McKeown says:

    We know it was the Lawwell, Desmond, Lennon auld pals act that got him the job. Lennon’s hugely inflated arrogance and ego, allowed him tae think the 10 was there for him and him alone tae win or lose. So self-important, he believed it was HIS entitlement and nobody else’s. And btw, seriously, way things seem tae be goin at this time, don’t be too surprised, if this season goes down the plughole before xmas, we could see the ‘dream team’ of him and Kennedy back in there. Would not put it by this board for one second tae try that. Couldnae mark any of their necks wi a blowtorch, Lennon included.

  • john mc guire says:

    smoking mirrors the guys who are in the running are Kenny Miller or Barry Ferguson or maybe an outside punt Neil Mc Cann you just have to listen to any of them and you can see its all very easy to these guys ,so get your self down to the bookies .

  • Roonsa says:

    Aside from all the obvious personality traits that should make employers think twice about even speaking with Lenny, he is not, as you say, a good manager. He is terrible. He doesn’t know what a Plan B is.

    I think back to two games that Lennon for Celtic played whilst Martin O’Neill was the manager. UEFA Cup 2003, v Blackburn. In the first leg at Celtic Park we escaped with an ill deserved 1-0 win thanks to Larrson’s late winner. Before that, Blackburn totally controlled the game and really should have won comfortably. This prompted Souness (allegedly) to come out with his “men against boys” quip. Oh ye bloody think so? Martin O’Neill being the master tactician he was … dropped Sutton into midfield and played Big Bad John alongside Henke up front. It worked an absolute treat and we pummeled them in the return leg. A glorious night.

    Skip forward to the 2019 League Cup Final against the Untermenschen. As with the game against Blackburn in 2003, we escaped with a 1-0 win when, in reality, we were by far the poorer team and would have lost if Morelos wasn’t such a chimp. What did Lenny learn from that performance and what tactics did he employ in the SPFL match that followed at Celtic Park a few weeks later? Clearly the man learned nothing as we were easily beaten by a much better team on the day. We did win the league that year and deservedly so but remember we were up against the huns who lost 1-0 at home to Hamilton just before COVID cut the season short. They were utterly gash which makes you wonder how they could come to Celtic Park and win so easily. It should not have happened.

    The following season, as we all know, was an unmitigated disaster and Lenny’s Legacy is not a book that he will be writing about his time at Celtic Park any time soon (or ever).

    That there is even talk about him going to Easter Road is a sign of how chaotic things are over there. They should definitely be challenging to be Team 3 in Scotland. They are not even close. Lenny won’t change that. It will be a shocking decision if they make it.

  • Eldraco says:

    We were daft enough to take him and Rodgers back twice!.

    I blame Stephen Hawking for discovery black hole radiation because we have all gone fucking looney tunes

  • Johnny Green says:

    What has Neil Lennon being linked with the Hibs job got to do with Celtic? Why is it relevant news on a Celtic blog? Does anyone really care? Neil is history and Hibs are irrelevant.

    • James Forrest says:

      You wanna write the blog? Until you do, I’ll decide what it publishes stuff on.

      The name of the blog is The CelticBlog, but I’ve been clear since I started working on it that it was a Scottish football site from a Celtic perspective.

      That’s why I write about other clubs and other issues in the game.

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