Irish Daily Mirror

Spoilsport­s can do one! Football is all about the passion, emotion and, yes, wild celebratio­ns

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CELEBRATIO­N police who want managers and players to curtail that winning feeling need to get a life.

Social media spoilsport­s who claim Arsenal overreacte­d after beating Liverpool, a huge result in the context of the title race, were out of order.

Football is a game of passion, emotion and entertainm­ent.

Why shouldn’t Gunners captain Martin Odegaard enjoy a light-hearted moment by taking pictures of a club photograph­er who has supported Arsenal all his life?

Why shouldn’t manager Mikel Arteta sprint along the touchline celebratin­g the Gunners’ clinching goal in a frantic 3-1 win?

Beneath all the sneering at Arsenal (celebratin­g in the dressing room, right), there seemed to be an undercurre­nt of sour grapes.

When your own club’s players and manager celebrate, it’s OK, but it’s over the top when others release the emotion they have bottled up for 90 minutes.

If Arsenal had lost last weekend, and fallen eight points behind Liverpool, there would have been fans ringing 606 and saying Arteta had taken them as far as he can, instead of calling him a hero.

Those are the fine margins of management. So, he was well within his rights to release that pressure, to savour the moment.

Celebratio­n is part of the game, part of the spectacle at all levels. I celebrated when John Rooney scored with an overhead kick for Macclesfie­ld against Bamber Bridge last Saturday – the thrill of the moment literally made me jump out of my seat.

And if you can’t enjoy the passion of a massive win in front of 60,000 fans like Arteta, when is it permissibl­e to do it? Everton boss Sean Dyche says managers should be given more leeway for their behaviour on the touchline because football is an emotionall­y-charged sport, and he is 100 percent right.

People who say you shouldn’t celebrate, or give it large ones, until you have won something are narrowmind­ed.

In that case, only Manchester City and Manchester United fans would have been ‘allowed’ to celebrate among Premier League players, managers and fans last season because they were the only clubs to win a trophy.

Come off it – the game has changed enough as it is without taking emotion out of it.

I absolutely love the fact Arteta’s passion and intensity rubs off on his players.

I loved it when my old manager at Leicester, Martin O’neill, was like a jack-in-thebox in the technical area.

I love it when Jurgen Klopp walks over to the Kop after a home win and orchestrat­es their celebratio­ns. And when did we first notice Jose

Mourinho? When he ran along the Old Trafford touchline after Porto knocked United out of the Champions League 20 years ago.

Some of the greatest moments in football are defined by celebratio­n, not the actual game itself.

Jimmy Glass, the goalkeeper whose last-gasp winner kept Carlisle in the Football League 25 years ago, and the joyful pitch invasion it triggered.

Maidstone knocking Ipswich out of the FA Cup the other week, and Wrexham – 92nd in the league – knocking out topof-the-table Arsenal in 1992.

Those clubs had won nothing. Can’t they celebrate?

Steve Evans had a dig about Reading celebratin­g their 1-0 win at “little old Stevenage” in midweek, but Royals fans had not just been fighting for three points – they have been fighting to keep their club in existence. Surely that’s worth a little euphoria?

We’ve had enough joy sucked out of football by VAR, fans inconvenie­nced by difficult kick-off times and managers being sacked every week.

When your team wins, it sends you to work or to school with a smile on your face. That’s worth fighting for.

So, let’s not remove the game’s most priceless commodity – emotion – just because it might upset the nanny-state celebratio­n police.

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