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Pleasing some of the Peepul none of the time. Why Martin is doomed at Ibrox.

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Let me tell you a story about how fickle and how crazy people can be—and how it’s most often not the big stuff that sets them off, but the little things.

Let me take you back to 2009. In Colombia.

At that time, the country was gripped by a wave of violence as drug cartels fought each other for supremacy. It was around the time the cartels were being squeezed out of the trade by the Mexicans and reduced to mere suppliers instead of the wholesale organisers they once were. Still, the violence was extreme.

Over 1,000 civilians were being murdered every year in the ongoing war.

And then the death of Pepe brought people out onto the streets in rage. Protests erupted across the land. The anger was off the charts.

And who was Pepe?

Pepe was a hippo. A wild hippopotamus, shot by the government as part of a cull because the number of hippos in Colombia had swelled to dangerous proportions. And how had that happened? How had Colombia ended up with too many hippos?

Well, back in 1978, when Pablo Escobar bought the vast tract of land that he called Hacienda Nápoles, he decided to stock it with exotic wild animals.

When Escobar was eventually killed by Colombian police, Hacienda Nápoles fell into ruin—though he hadn’t lived there for years, having spent that time on the run. Authorities moved in to deal with his private zoo. Most of the animals were sent to local zoos.

But, because it was going to be too difficult to move them, the authorities left behind four adult hippos—three females and one male. After all, how much harm could they do? Well, that turns out to be quite a bit.

They bred, and their offspring eventually struck out in search of their own territories. Before long, there were little pods of them roaming up and down the river.

By the time the police shot Pepe, there were two dozen hippos living in the water and lands around Medellín. And in a country where 1,000 people were dying each year in an ongoing drug war, it was the killing of Pepe that pushed people onto the streets, demanding that the state stop its violence—against animals.

Colombia now has over 200 wild hippos living in its rivers.

The point is, you never know what will set people off.

You never know what single moment, what seemingly trivial thing, will pierce the public consciousness and trigger a fury nothing else has.

I was thinking about that last night as people started sending me clips from the Ibrox fan forums about Russell Martin and his views.

Why were they sending them? Simple.

Because of the article I wrote yesterday on Martin—and how he didn’t seem like the sort of personality to go to that club and get sucked into the hatred and the bigotry and all that cultural nonsense. Or at least, I hope he’s not.

But if you look at those forums, more and more of their fans are coming to the conclusion that he’s just not their kind of person. And I’m starting to suspect that either he’ll pander to them in more ways than just talking up the character of Jimmy Bell… or he’s going to have serious problems the moment things take a downturn.

And I wonder—if this guy had a more conventional background, if he was more like the prototypical Ibrox manager, would he be getting less stick? Or to put that another way, would he be getting more support? Would the fans be more inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt? That might be important.

Because if the answer to that is yes—if his background would have made him more palatable—then he’s already in trouble. His biggest problem wouldn’t be his form or record, but the person he is. And even a strong start wouldn’t fix that.

Some of the media coverage is of the same sort. While it’s refreshing that this is one Ibrox boss who isn’t getting his arse kissed by every major outlet, the fact that he’s not tells its own story. I genuinely cannot remember the last time one of their managers wasn’t met with a full-throated welcome from the media pack.

Like I said—Colombians had endured a thousand murders a year, but it took the shooting of a hippo to get them out protesting. Cut-through, they call it. The moment a single thing pierces the public consciousness in a way that no amount of background noise ever could.

Here’s another example. I’ll tell you the moment I knew Boris Johnson was screwed—that he was doomed and wasn’t going to survive a full term. It was the photo of the Queen, sitting alone in Westminster Abbey at the funeral of her husband, during Covid. Sitting alone in grief. Socially distanced. Following the rules.

And then, right next to it in the newspapers, a photo of Johnson’s staff drinking, laughing, partying inside Number 10 during lockdown.

That single image crystallised the disgrace of it all. For Middle England—the people who had put him there in the first place—that was the breaking point. It wasn’t the policies. It wasn’t the scandals. It was the photo. The monarch, grieving in silence. And the clowns in government pissing up the office curtains, on his watch.

That’s when I knew he was done.

I listened recently to Ed Miliband talking on The Rest Is Politics. He said he doesn’t believe the bacon sandwich photo cost him the election—but he admitted it codified something. It cemented the image of him as awkward, geeky, not-quite-normal. And he said it was up to him and his team to shift that perception.

But he gives himself too much of a hard time on that one; once a perception like that takes hold, you’re in real trouble. You’ll never get it shifted.

Same with Biden. I just finished Jake Tapper’s book, Original Sin.

It’s a great piece of work on how the Democratic Party covered up the extent of Biden’s cognitive decline. I don’t know why they bothered; the public could see what was wrong and the damage was done even before the disastrous debate. Poll after poll after poll had shown the US electorate didn’t believe Biden could do another four years.

So when that debate happened, it didn’t change anything. It simply turned suspicion into certainty. Because a man’s age is a fact. You can’t campaign it away. You can’t spin it out of existence. That debate could have gone swimmingly; the public perception of Biden wouldn’t have moved one millimetre.

The same goes for Martin, I think. The damage is already done. He is starting out with no established support base in that fan community. Even in the posts that don’t slag him or his record, there’s almost no warmth. No enthusiasm. No faith.

The most supportive comments are along the lines of “Well, he’s the manager now, so we just have to get behind him.” Much of the media coverage echoes the same sentiment. That’s not confidence. That’s resignation.

It won’t protect him in a crisis. It won’t get him through a bad run. He’s not one of their own. And I think that bothers them more than his credentials. They’re used to a certain type of guy in the dugout. If not part of the club’s cultural bubble, then a certain detached arrogance. Martin doesn’t fit that mould at all.

If this guy runs into trouble—and I mean even a couple of bad results—nothing is going to save him. Not the media. Not the fans. Maybe not even the boardroom. And bear in mind—it’s Americans in the boardroom. Americans who don’t have a lot of patience when it comes to perceived failure.

He has to start well. He may, in fact, have to start very well.

If he doesn’t… he’s done. The more I read online, the clearer it becomes. He’ll need to be brilliant even to last the standard twelve months—that cursed average lifespan of an Ibrox manager since 2012. Because they are already sharpening their knives for his back, not just on the forums but in the newsrooms too.

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James Forrest has been the editor of The CelticBlog for 13 years. Prior to that, he was the editor of several digital magazines on subjects as diverse as Scottish music, true crime, politics and football. He ran the Scottish football site On Fields of Green and, during the independence referendum, the Scottish politics site Comment Isn't Free. He's the author of one novel, one book of short stories and one novella. He lives in Glasgow.

21 comments

  • bertie basset says:

    James , you could add Irish Americans , after all the The Fenian Brotherhood was started and founded there , these Irish Americans like the Irish themselves have long memories , i hope the Huns don’t do paranoia !!!! Chortle

  • PatC says:

    I’m sure an interview with him chugging from the Loving Cup while cycling round the trophy(less) room on the St Etienne Chopper will get him on board.

  • J.K. says:

    People don’t like change it seems.
    Not only do they have a Buddhist Coach, they also have Catholic owners.Could be the perfect storm.
    Maybe this will be the cataclysm that drives a few of them over the edge hopefully.
    As Bob Dylan said, “The times they are a changin”.
    Wait ’til they find out man has walked on the Moon.

  • Kevcelt59 says:

    That’s how managerial masqueraders like gerrard became a hero straight away over there. Bought right intae and played up on, their entitlement, victim, bullshit psyche. The more arrogant and entitled he became, the more they loved him for it. The new guy knows what they’re like. He’ll also find out how ‘impatient’ they are.

  • Johnny Green says:

    Surely he just has to survive until after June 23rd, then after that it does not matter what any of them think in the short term, for they will have no real leverage to get rid of him. The season ticket money is already in the coffers I take it.

  • sixtaeseven says:

    Ibrox CEO Stewart won’t have helped RM’s case by calling him the club’s “Culture Architect”.
    The People will embrace that, Im sure…

  • JohnC says:

    Based on no more than a GUT feeling I think. Russel Martin will be a success at Ibrox.

    I’ve listened to him. , his podcast, his reviews of games. He will create a style a shape , what they’ve been missing.

    Will it. Stop Celtic that will depend on Rodgers and the board.

    • micmac says:

      You could be right John, but having watched his teams play, the one thing the Ibrox fans will need is patience, and as we all know that’s in short supply over there.
      His teams stick rigidly to playing out from the back, possession football, even more rigidly than BR’s Celtic. With Southampton in a relegation fight last season he refused to change and paid with his job, It will be interesting times to see if any challenge comes from Ibrox, and I have a feeling, Hearts, Hibs and Aberdeen will be more competitive next season.

      • Clachnacuddin and the Hoops says:

        If that turns out to be the case Micmac – The Cheats with Whistles, Flags and Monitors will have a big factor in play for sure !

  • micmac says:

    The tests will come up thick and fast very early, between 22/23rd of July and 26/27th of August he’ll have 3 qualifiers for the Champions League. None of them are gimme’s and if he does make the playoff round he’ll play either Benfica or Club Brugge. Get through those and he’ll be a hero, fail and they’ll be unforgiving, especially if he doesn’t make it to the play off round.
    I don’t know how desperate he was for a job, but it looks to me that he might have walked into the wrong movie.

  • Cgreen123 says:

    Totally agree Martin is doomed before he starts. Some observations.

    The early photos of him showed a strong physical character but when he speaks there is something flaccid about the face, something weak-jawed that it would be difficult to take him seriously.

    With Ange you get want you see but this guy is a weak man hiding behind a beard.

    The DR is showcasing his ” Glamorous” partner which is another red flag. He is supposed to be a Buddhist and concerned with the higher things of life but he falls for a half-naked, pancaked “floozy” with over-large fake bazongas.

    The most damming thing about him is his membership of the Green Party. Sick of the main parties, I actually considered voting for them so read the their manifesto and within a few pages to can see that they are unhinged. You don’t have to be that clever to see it.

    No offence, but by this reckoning Martin seems a weak, shallow and stupid man.

    He should fit right in at Ibrox.

    • Clachnacuddin and the Hoops says:

      I wonder do Celtic FC and Hibernian FC vote for The GREEN Party !

      SNP for me Cgreen123….

      But I’d ABSOLUTELY LOVE to see a party called – SCOTTISH SINN FEIN !!!!

      • stanepoke says:

        Bad enough with Socialist SNP, be absolutely horrific with Communist Green Party. There are no Political Parties worthy of our vote, they are all corrupt to the core. It is time to invest In Independent Individuals and much smaller Government.

        • Clachnacuddin and the Hoops says:

          Smaller government fine as long as it’s completely 100% independent and 100% free of The Butchers Apron !

        • Volp says:

          If you think the SNP are socialist and the Green Party are communist then you don’t know what socialist or communist is, and should really keep quiet on both to prevent making yourself look ignorant again.

    • Volp says:

      So tell me ,what is ‘ unhinged’ , in your mind about the Green Party ?

  • micmac says:

    Just noticed that with Ross County and St Johnstone relegated, The Rangers are bottom of the League alphabetically before a ball is kicked. That disnae bode well for Martin. .

  • J.K. says:

    If Martin becomes “Culture Architect”, does that make them “Culture Club” ?.
    Just a thought.

    • Martino Albano says:

      Karma, karma, karma, chameleon. Red ,Gold and Green, but he’ll be having a severe case of the Blues attempting to be the architect of a fresh culture over there.

  • Jim m says:

    More kulture klub J.K , tee hee !

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