The Guardian (USA)

Boli Bolingoli and Aberdeen eight place Scottish game under pressure

- Ewan Murray

Scottish football has had worse weeks, it is just difficult to remember them. For two days of the past three a government coronaviru­s briefing has been dominated by the once beautiful, now unseemly, game.

That eight Aberdeen players who thought it wise to attend a busy citycentre bar after a home defeat by Rangers had politician­s fixing their eyes towards the Scottish Premiershi­p’s resumption even without the extraordin­ary actions of Boli Bolingoli. The Celtic left-back, widely regarded as expendable before his trip to Spain, has now triggered the postponeme­nt of three fixtures. It is quite the claim to infamy. A penny for the thoughts of KR Reykjavik, due to leave tight restrictio­ns in their home country to face Celtic in a Champions League qualifier next week.

Those of cynical dispositio­n towards the Scottish government will highlight this is a useful distractio­n from the chaos involving exam results but the national sport has brought itself into disrepute at a time when it can ill afford it. Coronaviru­s has left Scottish clubs scraping for existence, anxious to have gate money available before long. Instead, Nicola Sturgeon has warned that one more transgress­ion will halt the sport indefinite­ly. If that occurs, clubs will be pushed to the brink.

Bolingoli’s antics defy belief. He skipped to Spain for an overnight stay, not informing the club of his jaunt either in advance or – with Aberdeen-gate dominating the news – upon his return. In taking his place among the Celtic substitute­s for the draw at Kilmarnock on Sunday, he not only breached quarantine protocols but put at risk players and staff from both sides. When Neil Lennon, the Celtic manager, said he was “livid” and “appalled” this felt like an understate­ment. It is difficult to envisage Bolingoli in a Celtic shirt again.

Celtic say they have “led the way” and “could have done no more” in relation to Covid-19 protocols. This verges on untimely sanctimony, not untypical of the Old Firm, yet scores of staff at Celtic and Aberdeen, subject to pay cuts and fears over their futures, have worked tirelessly and profession­ally for months when assisting with football’s resumption. It is difficult to pinpoint what could be done about rogue elements such as Bolingoli or the Aberdeen eight. Footballer­s have a responsibi­lity, just as they retain a duty to deploy even traces of common sense.

Less high-profile incidents have been curiously forgotten. Rangers and Motherwell had to delay kick-off for a friendly match on 22 July after test results were late in appearing. But Rangers had split their squad in two and had played Dundee United earlier the same day, posing questions which haven’t been fully answered. Hibernian

had to call off a practice game against Ross County because of a testing delay. St Mirren appeared at the heart of a cluster when seven members of staff tested positive for Covid-19; only for six of them to be explained as false outcomes.

Scottish football’s handling of the new normal hasn’t been faultless. Rod Petrie, the Scottish FA’s president, spoke of acting “swiftly and decisively” over the Bolingoli affair; on Friday morning, with eight players in enforced isolation, Aberdeen’s Saturday lunchtime trip to St Johnstone was still on the fixture card. “No you don’t” said the Scottish government, as the permanentl­y underwhelm­ing football authoritie­s cowered like naughty schoolboys.

The top flight, raced back to meet the start date for a new television deal, is dangling by a thread. Governing bodies, who botched the curtailmen­t of the 2019-20 campaign, are now in precisely the movie they wanted to avoid. It isn’t their ball. Holyrood calls the shots, not the Scottish FA or the Scottish Profession­al Football League. The latter has sounded almost panic-ridden all along about fitting in 38 games. Now they must factor in rescheduli­ng.

This isn’t any standard season. Celtic’s pursuit of 10 titles in a row adds intensity and fuels conspiracy. When taking to the pitch at Dundee United on the evening of 22 August Lennon’s men could be 11 points behind Rangers. Celtic might be favourites to prevail in the Premiershi­p but added pressure has been applied. There are no rules and regulation­s in place about how the Scottish game would, in football terms, deal with severe disruption or any prolonged delay. In a period where history making is on the line, that in itself represents the biggest of elephants in a room full of tribal division.

There can be no guarantees of players or clubs avoiding further transgress­ions. In fact, it would be unwise to bet against it. If that adds to the sense that Scottish football’s theatre will always outstrip on-field value, this time the backdrop is wholly serious. “Next time will be the red card as you will leave us with no choice,” Sturgeon warned. Some clubs would be in a battle to survive the suspension.

 ?? Photograph: Andrew Milligan/AFP/Getty Images ?? Eight Aberdeen players visited a city-centre bar after the 1-0 defeat by Rangers on the opening day of the Premiershi­p season.
Photograph: Andrew Milligan/AFP/Getty Images Eight Aberdeen players visited a city-centre bar after the 1-0 defeat by Rangers on the opening day of the Premiershi­p season.

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