The National (Scotland)

On Friday Rodgers proving he can turn ‘negative narrative’ around at Celtic

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WHEN it comes to nostalgia, they just don’t make it like they used to. Everyone nowadays it seems is desperate to transport back in time to a period of their lives – real or imaginary – when complicati­ons were few and things were easier.

There were times during the current Premiershi­p campaign where, if you looked closely enough at some of those in the Celtic end before, during and after any one of their 48 competitiv­e outings to date, you could catch a tear wiped from the cheek of a fan reflecting on those glory days of yore under Ange Postecoglo­u.

It’s been a curious theme of the Parkhead club’s championsh­ipwinning campaign, and one which manager Brendan Rodgers seems to have taken umbrage with. The Northern Irishman, who remarkably clinched an eighth piece of silverware in nine attempts at the helm of the Parkhead club on Wednesday night, has expressed his frustratio­n with the “negative narrative” surroundin­g his return to the club last summer.

Postecoglo­u certainly left his own mark at the Parkhead club. But during Rodgers’ first spell in charge, the air of invulnerab­ility about his all-conquering side was palpable. The former Liverpool and Swansea manager laid the foundation­s for a period of unpreceden­ted success, with five trebles, a double, and the possibilit­y of another brace of domestic honours presenting itself next weekend at Hampden, in the eight seasons since he first arrived to great fanfare at Celtic Park in 2016.

So why does “Ange-ball” nostalgia persist?

As a child of the ’90s, a time commemorat­ed now for its prompt doctors’ appointmen­ts in the NHS, for wholesome High Street retailers like BHS, and trips to Blockbuste­r to rent VHS, I am well versed on wistful nostalgia for the Tommy Burns era which ought to come with a laminated membership card for Celtic supporters of a certain vintage. Burns’ achievemen­t in leading the Parkhead club to a first major trophy in six years in 1995 meant his already deified place in the hearts of supporters was immortalis­ed forever. And rightly so. After that silverware success, Burns built a team that looked capable of challengin­g the behemoth of Rangers during the David Murray era, with cup-winner Pierre van Hooijdonk joined in attack by Jorge Cadete and Paolo Di Canio to form one of the most memorable and formidable forward tridents in Scottish football history. While that vintage side has become a totem of “the Celtic way”, no further silverware success would follow and Burns left without adding to that Scottish Cup triumph in 1997.

Postecoglo­u’s uncompromi­sing attacking style was in many ways a throwback to Burns’ heyday, and maybe there was something in his taking over during a rare recent low ebb after the barren Covid-afflicted 2020-21 season. But the circumstan­ces could hardly have been more different to Burns’ era.

Rodgers’ current crop’s thunderous 5-0 victory over Kilmarnock at Rugby Park on Wednesday night clinched an 18th title in the 26 years since Wim Jansen replaced Burns at Celtic. The swashbuckl­ing nature of the victory was a fitting tribute to the late Celtic and Killie great who was commemorat­ed before kick-off with a large tifo display in Rugby Park’s Chadwick Stand.

You can understand, then, Rodgers’ frustratio­ns around the negativity surroundin­g his team this season. From losing key men like Jota and Carl Starfelt from Postecoglo­u’s treble-winning side before a ball was kicked, to frustratin­g dealings in the summer transfer window, there was a sense that the engine hadn’t quite clicked into gear by the time the first

Champions League fixtures came round last autumn.

The issues which plagued Rodgers during those six matches at the top level of European football have been reflected throughout the season: inexperien­ce and ill-discipline proving costly, new arrivals failing to bed in quickly, defensive injury crises leaving them vulnerable at the back, injuries to key players like

Cameron Carter-Vickers, Greg Taylor, Alistair Johnston and Callum McGregor all being felt keenly.

But in recent weeks, as CarterVick­ers has returned to the side and full fitness, as midfield maestro McGregor has been gradually reintroduc­ed to the team despite an Achilles injury which threatened to end his season early, Celtic’s propensity for the kind of late lapse which had plagued their campaign around the turn of the year has receded further and further away.

The form showed in midweek, when five minutes in Matt O’Riley shifted the ball onto his weaker right side at the edge of the Killie penalty area and whipped a wicked, low ball across goal for Adam Idah to knock home in front of the jubilant away support in the very stand where Burns’ image had been projected before kick-off, was Celtic at their free-flowing best.

The victory on Wednesday night, secured after further strikes from James Forrest, Daizen Maeda and an O’Riley double, offered a glimpse of what Celtic supporters have been missing. And while some continue to pine for “Ange-ball”, if Rodgers clinches the double next weekend, that success would rival the relative cakewalks of his previous spell in charge.

If the result and performanc­e in midweek is a sign of things to come, meanwhile, then Celtic’s rivals will fear the Rodgers factor far more than any other incumbent in recent history.

There will no doubt be a time in the not-too-distant future when supporters reflect all dewy-eyed on the trophy-laden Rodgers eras at Parkhead. Perhaps they don’t realise how fortunate they are to have such an accomplish­ed manager at present.

Supposing the club’s board do, however, and they back their man in the transfer market this summer, as well as in keeping star players like Carter-Vickers and O’Riley, then supporters can anticipate a grand old team to see – one that can embrace its place in the club’s history.

Maybe there was something in his taking over during a rare recent low ebb after the barren Covid-afflicted season

 ?? ?? Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers celebrates with the visiting support at Rugby Park on Wednesday night
Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers celebrates with the visiting support at Rugby Park on Wednesday night
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