Articles

The Celtic boss is under no obligation to correct other people’s mistakes.

|
Image for The Celtic boss is under no obligation to correct other people’s mistakes.

Some people just won’t see what’s right in front of them. They refuse to acknowledge anything that contradicts the narrative they’ve built in their heads about a given situation. Today, I read a suggestion that our manager has a responsibility and a duty to develop a specific player at our club—Odin Thiago Holm.

I find it ridiculous that anyone could possibly believe that.

No such responsibility exists. None. The suggestion that Brendan Rodgers has somehow slept at the wheel because this player hasn’t progressed up until now and has been left out of our European squad is absurd.

Rodgers has a long track record of making players better.

Just look at the current first-team squad: the players in it look streets ahead of where they were this time last season, thanks to Rodgers.

Matt O’Reilly got his £25 million move to England based on the improvements made under the current boss.

The simple fact is that Holm is a symptom of a transfer “strategy” that has failed. All the big sales we’ve made in the last 18 months—which have netted our club a fortune—are from signings that predate the hiring of Mark Lawwell and the dreadful transfer windows he oversaw. Those windows have not produced a single sale that has netted us a substantial profit. Almost none of the players he signed have been deemed good enough to be regular starters.

If we’re simply looking at Holm through the lens of last summer’s dire window, perhaps there’s a simpler truth: he is just not good enough

He is further evidence that last summer’s recruitment was flawed in every way—an utter failure on every level. He is part of a general calamity, the blame for which lies at the doors of certain people within Celtic Park, and in particular, whomever sanctioned the hiring of Lawwell as head of recruitment.

I know this is difficult for some people to grasp. They struggle to comprehend how the folks they regard as geniuses could have gotten something so spectacularly wrong, but the summer clear-out we’ve just undergone was primarily because so much dross had been accumulated during Lawwell Jr.’s time running our signing policy. His hiring was one of the most suspect, ridiculous, and unprofessional acts ever committed by our institution.

Holm was left out of the European squad because he is not good enough to supplant the players currently in the team.

Nobody wants to hear the argument that, because we play in a “weak league,” we should field inferior players just to turn them into bankable assets. That’s preposterous. That’s someone who’s spent too long drooling over the balance sheet rather than the team sheet, and no manager is going to go along with that—nor should they.

This is the flaw that some people refuse to recognise in any signing policy that doesn’t work according to the manager’s needs. These people can accumulate all the projects they want, but the manager is under no obligation to play them or treat them as ready before he decides they are.

We’ve hired a world-class operator to run the football department, and these sorts of crucial decisions are his to make.

His only obligation is to put a winning team on the pitch—simple as that. Failures above his head are not his problem, and they should not be made his problem. And I’ll go one better: they should not be made our problem as supporters who want to see the best players start for our club.

Rodgers won’t get any credit for fielding inferior footballers and dropping points. Had those above him done their own jobs better and not dumped so much rubbish into our squad, this dilemma would never have arisen.

Holm cost us a lot of money, but that’s on them—the people who sanctioned that signing without considering where he fit into the bigger picture.

Let’s not forget: this is a player who was signed before we even had a manager in the building.

When a club does something as daft as that, it deserves to take the hit, and I have no sympathy for whoever thought they could play Football Manager with our actual squad and cash and now feels frustrated that they don’t get to see the guy in action.

The one thing I know about the window just closed, despite my reservations about how some of it went, is that the manager personally sanctioned every signing and knows exactly what role he wants each of them to play.

This is not some guy wildly swinging at every pitch.

The sooner this club puts a proper structure in place for him to work within—one that keeps the amateurs and armchair experts at bay—the better off we’ll be.

Until then, people should steer clear of things they don’t understand.

The boss decides when a player is ready, and until then, that player will have to keep working hard like everyone else.

If the boss eventually decides he’s never going to be ready, that’s not his fault for failing to bring the guy on.

However, it does suggest that whoever signed him in the first place might have been out of their depth and staggeringly unqualified to make that call… and that raises questions, too, about those above that individual, and who allowed him to act as if he were.

Share this article

0 comments

  • Jay says:

    I think BR maybe sees some potential in Holm with the fact he is still at the club & has featured from the bench this season. I can see him being utilised in cups to give certain first team players a rest.

    I don’t think it comes as a surprise he doesn’t see him as ready for the Champions League considering how his brief appearance in it last season went.

    Only reason I have the above belief is this seems like the window when if the manager didn’t want you, you were gone. It seems like Holm & Yang are the only one who have survived the cull. Nawrocki is still here but was linked with multiple exits over the summer so I imagine that’s down to no deal being achieved or the manager decided he needed him for cover in the event of an injury crisis in defence.

  • Ed says:

    Don’t forget, the manager warned Holm to step up in training. If he doesn’t do this, why should Rodgers waste his energy. If he does, Rodgers will award him.

  • Indy says:

    Quisling Quick News. P67 still waiting on that operation to remove his tongue from lawwells fat rear end I see.

  • NeilR says:

    I disagree with part of your argument James, though not with the main conclusion.

    Developing the people who work under you is or should be a key goal of every manager in every company in every industry. Brendan absolutely does have “a responsibility and a duty to develop” every single player in the first team squad, and contribute to the development of those beyond it. That duty is to both the club and the individual players, and it’s rigiht up there alongside his duties to strive to produce good team performances on the pitch and win trophies.

    However, a mountain of evidence indicates Brendan is doing exactly that, and mostly with great success. Many players in the current squad have improved under him, in some cases out of all recognition.

    Support and encouragement is there for every player who wants to improve himself; after that it’s a matter of the player’s talent and persistence. Football is a ruthless meritocracy, and every time any football club signs a player to go into the first team, it is putting a huge barrier in the way of young players who want to break through – and that’s how it should be.

    If Holm is or becomes good enough, he can expect to get his chance under Brendan. If he isn’t, he’ll have chances to prove himself elsewhere. The great majority of young players – whether home-reared or brought in – fail to make the grade at every top club. Celtic is no different, and anyone trying to blame Holm’s situation on Brendan without very good evidence to support their contention is either confused or has an agenda.

  • NeilR says:

    There were paragraphs in that when I sent it! Oh well….

  • Clachnacuddin and the Hoops says:

    If he’s good enough he’ll (hopefully) make it it – If not then Paradise won’t be his ‘Holm’ any longer…

    But aye – The spectre of ‘Sonny’ (Lawwell) is rapidly disappearing by the day… Thankfully !

  • Paul Mac says:

    I can see the point of view of why he was left out .. As a midfielder we have more need in registering Yang for example as we have less cover on the wings .. And with the 17 non Scottish trained players then at least 1 was not going to make it, couldnt leave out the current 3 (Cal Mac – especially as he is club trained!, Reo or Paulo) or Engels (who obviously was signed with the Champions league in mind), McCowan obviously is the McCarthy replacement as Scottish byt non club trained player and expect wee Turley to make the bench as he is on the B list. Funny how Adam Montgomery is listed as a striker whereas Kyogo is listed as a midfielder by UEFA??

  • Yorkshire Bhoy says:

    I was chuffed when Nepo Boy resigned.

    I’ll be even more chuffed if Nepo Daddy follows him out the door!

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *