The Scotsman

Strachan: Lennon coin incident not sectarian

- By CRAIG FOWLER

Former Celtic manager Gordon Strachan does not believe the coin thrown at Neil Lennon in last week’s Edinburgh derby was an act necessaril­y motivated by sectariani­sm.

Writing in his column for Paddy Power, Strachan put the incident down to “morons” who need to be outed on TV and in the media for their “disgusting behaviour”.

The Hibs manager hit the deck in front of the dugouts during the 0-0 draw at Tynecastle after being struck on the jaw by a coin thrown from the main stand. This was one of many shameful incidents during the game, as Hearts keeper Zdenek Zlamal was also attacked as he went to retrieve the ball from fans in the away end. Graffiti reading ‘Hang Neil Lennon’ was also daubed on a wall near Tynecastle.

Lennon admitted after the game he didn’t know if the coin-throwing incident was sectarian-motivated or not – but did highlight the general “racist” abuse he has encountere­d in Scotland.

While Strachan is under no illusions as to the religious bigotry Lennon has faced throughout his time in Scottish society, he feels coin throwing at football games is part of a different

problem. He wrote: “The incidents that Neil Lennon experience­d in Scotland years ago, when he was at Celtic, it’s official that some of that stuff was sectariani­sm. People went to jail.

“Neil’s one of my best friends but, the incident we saw recently, I don’t think it’s the same. Coin throwing didn’t just happen to him at Tynecastle, it happened to others as Livi and St Mirren. No one specifical­ly is being targeted.

“You cannot put the coin throwing down to sectariani­sm, you put it down to morons.

“Neil is a lovely man, a right good laugh. But we change, sometimes into people we don’t like, at games. My tongue used to be my weapon because I was too small to kick anyone – I used to say things and go ‘oh dear’ and have to go and apologise after the game.

“At a football match, the worst comes out in people. Educated people go into grounds and turn into maniacs when the game starts, they go bonkers as soon as that whistle goes. People often tell me they want to experience a game in Scotland and I say ‘you’ll love the noise and the colour,butyou’llbehugely­disappoint­ed by what you see and hear’. It can be nasty. But it’s not new. I went to a game in the 60s and somebody threw a dart that got stuck in my mate’s head. And coins were probably bigger back then. While I was punched in the side of the head during a game in the 80s, there was just no coverage then.”

Strachan called on TV companies, newspapers and authoritie­s to use the advancemen­t in technology to help identify and shame the culprits.

He wrote: “We have all these cameras, why don’t we zoom in on disgusting behaviour, and shame the people doing it? Is this you? Or your dad, son, brother, employee, employer? Put them in the papers and on the screen, and make people think twice before they act like idiots – because they know their family or boss might see them. That would scare them.”

l Gordon Strachan was speaking exclusivel­y to Paddy Power News. To read more, visit news.paddypower.com

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