The bottom half of the league table gives an early feel of who is likely to compete against relegation this season. Newco have moved two points clear of the relegation playoff spot and are surely likely to consolidate their midtable position. Aberdeen are bottom, with five defeats in seven games, but a 4-0 routing of Dundee last time out saw their first win of the league campaign. Expect them to climb up the table.
That leaves Livingston, Falkirk and Dundee all on six points and likely relegation candidates. The latter will do well to take a point against Celtic on Sunday.
Steven Pressley was out of management for six years before getting the Dens Park job in the summer. League Cup defeats to Airdrie and Alloa in his first two games, which saw Dundee eliminated from the competition, put the pressure on, before a draw at Ibrox delivered their first point of the Premiership season.
A 97th minute penalty at home to Livingston produced their only win of the campaign so far. Even then, Livi enjoyed the majority of possession and the home side putting men behind the ball and relying on counter attacks. That’s quite a gameplan at home to a newly promoted minnow.
Brendan Rodgers will know to expect the same defensive approach on Sunday and will hope the 3-2 win over Motherwell last time out has greased the blunt attacking wheels enough to cope against a side short on just about everything.
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Hearts had a net spend …celtic made a 18 million profit……the difference
Celtic haven’t had a net spend for a while!!!
fourstonecoppi on 18th October 2025 7:39 pm
I certainly will as that video just floored me. If you are not familiar may I point you in the direction of the wonderful Mavis Staples
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqfIe8qEc70
HH
The Muscat thing will be interesting if he has McCann as assistant. I believe Bazza & The Hundits intended to sign hun hatchet men from SPFL teams so wouldn’t surprise me if they go down that route. It would be cheap and resonate with Muscat’s reputation.
Not to mention Muscat ‘s EBT for £1 million……which won’t get mentioned, played 22 games
Hearts dont look like crumbling the way Aberdeen did.
We need to start scoring more goals from open play and stop conceding from set plays.
TT
FAVOURITE UNCLE on 18th October 2025 5:19 pm
Prestonpans bhoys on 18th October 2025 5:09 pm
It is not allowed .So both should have been booked.
Dundee utd should be complaining bitterly. JIM GOODWIN would be on tv all week moaning if it was CELTIC.
……..
Jim Goodwin[and everybody else] knows that Celtic AND their fans a toothless virtue signallers who can’t be trusted.
HH
oot.
The huns will do well to be playing conference football next season.
I see the great Chris Davis is down to 17th in the championship!!…..kyogo not scored ?……touted on here as better than BR 🙄
TINYTIM on 18TH OCTOBER 2025 9:03 PM
Hearts dont look like crumbling the way Aberdeen did.
—-
Aberdeen didn’t look like crumbling this time last year. Hearts should finish second now.
Another week and Nawrocki still sits on the Hannover bench. Not played a single minute this season.
I can see us paying up his contract in the summer.
the Bada Bing on 18th October 2025 9:00 pm
Not to mention Muscat ‘s EBT for £1 million……which won’t get mentioned, played 22 game.
……
And Celtic AND Celtic fans agreed that Sevco ARE Rangers in 2016 and the honest dim Tims deny all knowledge of probably the greatest deceit in Celtic’s history.
There ain’t no good guys anymore, that is why Rodgers the grifter is being tolerated.
HH
oot.
I am intrigued…For all this talk about Muscat being the dirtiest player the world has ever seen and the possibility he will sign hatchet men and hammer throwers, can anyone confirm that his Chinese team is the dirtiest in their league? And did his Australian team have a reputation for rough house tactics? Or are some just a wee bit concerned that he might actually be not a bad coach and a threat to us? And anyway, had it not been for the arrival of Ange on these shores, would Muscat even have been in contention for the hun job?
Memo to the Celtic Collective….
It’s called a “bhoycott”……
It takes a certain arrogance to look down on people from the dizzying heights of the school supplies sector.
Who would win?
The Celtic Collective or a Celtic Way full of barking dogs?
Woof! Woof!
HH
oot.
Muscat might be a dirty player but lets agree he,s no Terry Hurlock…..lol
If Lennon had blown 40 Million CL money vs Kiarat Almaty then the Celtic Collective would have been all about sacking Lennon.
But when Rodgers blows it vs KA, the the CC is all about regime change?!
Has Rodgers got an invisible suit on?
Do the CC know that ALL of last seasons Transfare Window players were ALL on the bench as we lost to KA?
Maybe the selective and thouroghly dubious credentials of the CC need to be sacked?
Podcasts, Blogs, Websites, Gang Huts, Blog Cliques, etc, who Collectively have not uttered a single word about Celtic PLC going along with the Sevco ARE Rangers LIE in 2016?????
OR the curious apointment of Rodgers from the unemployment scrapheap?????
Which, IMHO, was engineered to sugar coat the appetites of Celtic fans to SHHHHHHH about same club lies and go and see uncle Tom Rodgers vs Rangers[full of 4th Division players] Aye!
But Shhhhh don’t mention that[4th division players]bit. lol
And knowing full well that Celtic fans would FOOLY display their COLLECTIVE, Selective Integrity, and buy these 49 quid Sevco ARE Rangers tickets, AND, then demonstrate they’re COLLECTIVE Stupidity by singing about Rangers being dead, AFTER paying Rangers prices to see Sevco!!!!
What a time to be alive!
For the record.
Rangers fans should NEVER have been punished for David Murray’s EBT Swindle.
Rangers fans should be punished for loads of other stuff, BUT not these crimes.
Celtic fans danced in the streets as Rangers fans got their club taken from them as David Murray walked away with a slap on the wrist.
Lets hope that none of our board have been up to anything especially with this project player recruitment thingy that sets the dogs on the streets tails wagging.
Celtic PLC are still up the back ae the bus keeping their [same club lie] powder dry as they piss themselves laughing at just how dim, Tims really are.
Neil Lennon is looking at the grafitti on the wall that says:
“DON’T REPLACE THE BOARD WITH THIS TCC CLOWN SHOW!”
I think he as a point.
Neil Lennon defeated the BEST football team that many of us have ever seen.
The FC Barcelona Galacticos from 2012.
AND.
Neil Lennon’s team came within 4 seconds of getting a draw vs this incredible team in the Nou Camp, by parking the bus and playing on the break.
Which brings me to the worrying whispers on the street, that Michael O’Neill might end up at Ibrox.
Hmmmmm.
I pray for Celtic fans to be less meek and easily led.
God Bless Neil Francis Lennon.
HH
oot.
Catherine Corless of Tuam, a magnificent woman:
A blustery September afternoon in Tuam, 20 miles north of the city of Galway in the west of Ireland. The terraced houses on the Dublin Road estate were built as family homes in the late Seventies, with small gardens front and back. Behind the houses those back gardens used to open onto an open green space about the size of a large football field, with a children’s playground in the middle.
Since June, however, the park has been sealed off. The lanes between the terraces that used to lead children and dog walkers to it are barricaded with metal gates and fences. Warning signs declare that “Unauthorised entry is strictly forbidden” and “Use of drones prohibited”. There are security lights and cameras mounted high on poles. Through slits in the fencing, it is possible to see mechanical diggers, Portakabins and mounds of earth and tarmac — the first signs of digging and earth moving.
Behind these high fences, in the middle of a housing estate, archaeologists are excavating the site of a mass grave.
Tuam, a town of 10,000 people that has two cathedrals and is entitled to call itself a city, has been a settlement since a monastery was built here in the 6th century. Its name derives from the word “tumulus”, meaning burial mound, but the excavation is not looking for the resting place of an ancient Celtic tribe or unearthing remains from the Great Famine of the 1840s.
NINTCHDBPICT001027503976
First communion for five St Mary’s children, circa 1951
Below this ground lies evidence of a 20th-century atrocity, and the men and women slowly, carefully, respectfully revealing it are forensic archaeologists, DNA experts and specialists in the recovery of “co-mingled” bones. Many have worked around the world, locating unmarked graves and exhuming the victims of executions, massacres and war crimes. The man in charge is a veteran of conflict zones working for the International Committee of the Red Cross.
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The land they are digging was the site of the St Mary’s Mother and Baby Home, run by the Sisters of Bon Secours, a nursing order of Catholic nuns. Locally it was known simply as “the Home” and, between 1925 and 1961, more than 2,000 young women who committed the “sin” of falling pregnant outside marriage were brought here to give birth.
• Catholics should show lost Tuam babies same care as the unborn
The average age of the women admitted over the 36 years of the home’s operation was 24; the youngest was aged 13 and the oldest 55. They were required to work at domestic tasks and, after giving birth, the great majority were separated from their children, often never seeing them again.
More than 3,000 children were either born in the home or admitted as unaccompanied babies. From a young age they could be “boarded out”: some went to loving foster homes, many to hard labour on farms or domestic servitude. Some (no one really knows how many) were “adopted” in an illicit trade; you could properly call it trafficking.
About 800 children from the home died. The infant mortality rate in the Thirties and Forties at the establishment was routinely above 30 per cent (as high as 39 per cent in 1933). By contrast, the national infant death rate in Ireland in the Thirties was 7.5 per cent.
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There are death certificates for all of them. But for 796 babies and infants there are no burial records. It is the remains of those children, dumped by the nuns in a disused sewage system that lies beneath the housing estate playground, that the archaeologists aim to recover.
Focus On: Tuam Mother And Baby Home Ahead Of Excavation Of Infants’ Bodies
PJ Haverty, who was born in the home in 1951. His mother, Eileen, was 27 at the time
GETTY IMAGES
Enter the amateur historian
The detective work that led to the excavation of these macabre secrets is the result of the stubborn and diligent curiosity of Catherine Corless, a woman perhaps best described as a kitchen-table historian.
Corless, 71, works from her home in the countryside outside Tuam. She stands by a laptop that is perched beside the sink with a view through the window across green fields divided by low stone walls. “I like the light just here,” she says.
Around her feet are her gentle dogs, Shadow and Willow, both Burmese mountain-collie crosses, or one of the cats who come here to be fed. The table beside her is strewn with folders and papers, maps, spreadsheets, newspaper articles and handwritten family trees.
While Corless talks quietly but rapidly, in a rush of detail and passion, her husband, Aidan, makes tea and offers biscuits.
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The couple have four children and ten grandchildren (with another on the way). Corless was a receptionist and typist at a local textile factory and, with her husband often on the road as a sales rep, she also took charge of the cattle and sheep on their small farm.
When her children began leaving home, she had time on her hands and began to indulge her interest in local history.
“I think it really started after my mother died in 1992. I used to ask her about her own family but she would just say, ‘They’re all gone now.’ Me asking her questions, that used to annoy her.
“After she died, I picked up a bit of courage and sent for her birth certificate. And there was no father’s name on her birth certificate. She was illegitimate.
IRELAND-INVESTIGATION-RELIGION
Corless at St Mary’s, known locally as “the Home”
GETTY IMAGES
“She was born in 1912 and she was fostered out a lot as a child. But she never let on to anyone, even to my father. So that really got me interested. And that was the start of it, really.”
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Corless attended an evening class in local history — three hours every Monday — with an inspirational teacher whose mantras were “Find the primary sources” and “Keep asking questions”. Then in 2011 she was asked to write an essay for the journal of the Old Tuam Society.
Corless decided to write about the mother and baby home. The institution was long closed and the building (originally a 19th-century workhouse) demolished. But Corless remembered from her schooldays the children from the home being marched two by two to the local school. She noted their plain clothing and heavy boots and how they were kept strictly separate from the other pupils.
She recalls, “When I started that essay, I thought I was just writing about the Bon Secours sisters looking after the children. I thought it was an orphanage.”
Information about the building’s past as a workhouse was readily available, but there was little on its recent history. Then, in a glass case at the local library, she found a student thesis written some 30 years earlier that described how young mothers had to leave their babies behind after a year in the home.
“I was shocked when I read that. It was all new to me.”
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With her tutor’s words firmly in mind, Corless kept “rooting and rooting” for information. She encountered a local and official reluctance to talk about the home but, piece by piece, pulled together information from local newspaper archives and made contact with people who had spent time in the home or were researching their own personal histories.
There was an account also by Halliday Sutherland, a British writer on public health who had visited Tuam in 1955.
Sutherland wrote that the children were clean but had “mobbed” him before being ordered by a nun to sing a song. “I realised that to these children I was a potential adopter who might take some boy or girl away to a real home. It was pathetic… At the Dogs Home in Battersea, every dog barks at the visitor in the hope that it will be taken away.”
Corless found “a staggering number of children had died” in the home, even compared with a high infant mortality rate in Ireland at the time. She asked Galway County Council — which had paid the nuns to run the home — for the death records from the institution.
“It would have cost me €5 for each death certificate. I said, I’m sorry, there’s no way I can afford that. So the lovely girl in the office gave me a printout of the information.”
Vigil Held For babies Buried At Tuam Mother And Baby Home Mass Burial Site
Corless with Carmel Larkin, who was born at the home, attending a vigil on the site in 2019
GETTY IMAGES
From a plastic folder, she produces the well-thumbed spreadsheet and a successor document that adds cause of death details. It is sobering to hold it and scan the pages of lives measured in hours, days, weeks or months, with causes of death listed as measles, bronchitis, debility, whooping cough, tuberculosis, epilepsy.
A puzzling factor remained. The death records she had obtained added up to 798 child deaths between 1925 and 1961. Yet the burial register for Tuam cemetery (right across the road from the building) listed just two graves of children from the home.
Local memories offered a possible explanation. Two boys, playing on the old workhouse site in the early Seventies, had fallen into a hole and found a human skull. Their find was explained away as “famine bones” — a priest blessed the area, local people erected a memorial grotto and the grass was reseeded. When the housing estate was built, the area was left untouched.
Corless examined old maps. A 1905 Ordnance Survey map of Tuam marked an area just by the perimeter wall of the home as a sewage tank, installed long after the famine in 1890. When she laid the 2007 OS map over that, the site of the old sewage tank matched the location of the grotto.
She concluded her essay with questions: “Is it possible that a large number of those little children were buried in that little plot at the rear of the former home? And if so, why is it not acknowledged as a proper cemetery?”
‘I’d get nasty letters, saying I was making this up’
Corless took her research and her questions to the county council, the Bon Secours sisters and the Archbishop of Tuam. No action followed. Then in 2014, a journalist found her, having spoken with a woman in Dublin who was searching for two brothers who had been born in the home.
In May 2014, the Irish edition of The Mail On Sunday broke the story under the front-page banner headline “A Mass Grave of 800 Babies”.
“That’s when the media explosion happened,” Corless says. “I’d never done this before in all my life, but I was so determined at this stage to talk with anyone who would bring the story out there and carry it and keep it alive. I had faced so much opposition and denial.”
People in Tuam were questioning why she was raking up the past. The head of the Bon Secours sisters asked to meet her at a hotel in Galway and told her she was upsetting elderly members of the order. Devout Catholics around the world found her address.
Tuam Mother and Baby Home Vigil Coincides With Papal Mass
Annette McKay, whose mother lost another child at the home, at a vigil in Tuam in 2018
GETTY IMAGES
“I’d get a few letters here and there. Nasty letters, insisting that these nuns were good and all that kind of thing. And saying that what I was doing was wrong and I was making this up.”
But Corless is nothing if not determined. Scepticism was the least of her problems when she was battling bureaucracy, delay and inaction.
“We have terrible, terrible trouble with things we don’t like,” she says. “There’s an Irish way — we just don’t talk about it. There’s a lot of shame.”
Moral discipline and misogyny
The growth of mother and baby homes in the 20th century came as a new Irish state was emerging from revolution and civil war. The fragile — and economically poor — young state relied heavily on the Catholic church for moral and social discipline. Eamon de Valera, the dominant political figure of the age, proudly labelled Ireland “a Catholic nation”.
That meant a society where a celibate, male, religious hierarchy dictated the social norms, where sex outside marriage was sinful and young women who became pregnant were carted away to these hidden institutions rather than shame their families.
The ingrained misogyny is clearly illustrated in remarks by Joseph Walsh, Archbishop of Tuam in the Fifties, opposing proposals to close the home.
“Anyone who has experience of the workings of a home for unmarried mothers will tell you that such a home must be in a place that is quiet, remote and surrounded by a high boundary wall,” he wrote. “It is most difficult to deal with unmarried mothers. In many cases, they are on the lookout to get in touch with men, and some of them cannot repress their excitement even when a man comes to deliver a message.”
Corless was never particularly religious, but her experience in researching the story of Tuam has left her never wanting to deal with the church.
She argues, “The reverence given to priests at the time was unbelievable. He was the representative of God. The church spoke about the next world and your soul. They said your soul would be damned for ever if you didn’t follow the word of the Catholic church. You wouldn’t get into heaven and all this rubbish.
“They scared the life out of us as children. They hypnotised the people and people were afraid of losing their souls for ever. And that’s what drove all this.”
When Pope Francis visited Ireland in 2018, Corless was invited to be part of a small group to meet him. She turned down the invitation.
Mass Baby Grave In Tuam
A makeshift shrine in the grounds of the Bon Secours home
GETTY IMAGES
“I was selected to be among 25 people who could stand and look at him and smile in a small room. I asked if it was possible to talk to him — I wanted to tell him about Tuam. ‘Oh,’ they said, ‘no, no, no. You’re just there in the audience.’ ”
Instead, on the day of the papal audience, she attended a vigil for the dead children from the home.
‘It felt impossible to take in the scope of the horror’
In 2015, the Irish government established a commission to examine the history of 18 mother and baby homes. It would not publish its final report until 2021 but it did order a partial excavation of the Tuam site.
That excavation focused on a set of deep chambers, thought to be part of a sewage treatment construction beside the old septic tank.
Katherine Zappone, children’s minister in Dublin at the time, recalls in her newly published memoir the day in February 2017 when she was summoned to an “urgent meeting” with senior members of the commission and the chief state pathologist.
Zappone writes, “They came to inform me that their excavations … had revealed significant quantities of juvenile remains, individuals with age-at-death ranges from approximately 35 foetal weeks to 2-3 years.”
The minister was shown photographs of some of the remains. “I could not utter a word. I was dumbfounded. It felt impossible to take in the gargantuan scope of the horror contained in the photos. The violence, disrespect, unfathomable silence and hiddenness of lives just beginning … I cannot remember what happened during the rest of my work day.”
Corless felt her work was done — she had been vindicated. Now the Irish state and maybe the church would take over and recover the remains for proper burial. Instead, the official consensus was that the site should be left alone and a memorial erected.
“I said, ‘You’re going to bless the site and leave the babies in the sewage system?’ That was my next battle. I said, ‘You can’t do that.’ They were just put down there, one on top of the other in those chambers, no coffins, maybe a sheet.”
She was not alone. She had her family, a growing band of survivors and relatives and a torrent of cards and letters from wellwishers.
“When I realised that the nuns, the government, the church, Galway County Council, the Western Health Board all wanted to forget this, I decided to use the media.
Media Visit To Tuam Mother And Baby Home Excavation
Daniel MacSweeney, who is leading the excavation team, and Dr Niamh McCullagh, a forensic officer
GETTY IMAGES
“Every chance I got I repeated the message — you cannot leave children, babies, in a sewage system. You cannot put up a memorial on a sewage tank.”
The delays were exacerbated by Covid lockdowns but eventually, in 2022, the Irish parliament passed a law allowing the excavation and established the Office of the Director of Authorised Intervention, Tuam.
The man heading that office is Daniel MacSweeney, who spent 15 years with the Red Cross including assignments in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen and Lebanon, where he spent years trying to locate persons missing since the country’s civil war.
MacSweeney’s team has experience from Ireland (some of the forensic archaeologists were involved in searching for the remains of people “disappeared” by the IRA during the Troubles) and across the globe.
“The site is a place where there are known to be manifestly inappropriate burials,” MacSweeney, 51, has said. “[The excavation is] a forensic recovery. It’s really done to the same standards one would apply at a crime scene investigation.”
It will be slow, complex work, lasting two to three years. Families of those who died and the remaining survivors are kept informed and many have given DNA samples to help with future identification of remains. They include Annette McKay, from Bury, near Manchester, whose mother, Maggie, gave birth to a daughter in Tuam in 1942.
Maggie and her siblings had been found destitute following her own mother’s death and were sent to “industrial schools”. Aged 17 she was raped by the school caretaker, became pregnant and was sent to the mother and baby home.
After her baby, Mary Margaret, was born, Maggie was deemed “troublesome” for wanting to spend time with her. She was sent to another institution and was pegging out laundry one day when a nun came up to her and told her, “The child of your sin is dead.”
McKay remembers, “Mum’s words to me were, ‘They put me on the road the same day.’ They threw her out.”
Maggie drifted to Galway, then north to Belfast and eventually to England. She told her children nothing of her traumatic experiences until she was in her seventies.
Years later, after the Tuam story hit the headlines in 2014, McKay visited Tuam for the first time. “I stood there on a wet, cold day and I cried. And, you know, all the curtains were twitching round about. I just thought, how are they ever going to put this right? Where are they going to start?”
A decade and more later, she is a campaigner for the bereaved families and the need for the children to have dignity of burial and commemoration.
“I used to be so sad and so upset, I used to go to bed for a day when I came home from Ireland. I just thought, Ireland’s not willing to listen. Now, I don’t care if you’re not willing to listen. You will listen, because I’ll make you listen. So you have to face up to this. Ireland has this wonderful reputation across the world — the craic, you know, all that kind of thing. But there is a dark side.”
An apology — but questions remain
The cost of the excavation has been estimated at €12 million (£10.4 million). The Bon Secours order, which still has convents across Ireland (as well as a presence in London and Glasgow) and is connected to the private hospital group Bon Secours Health System, has made a €2.5 million contribution.
In 2021, the nuns apologised for rejecting, silencing and excluding vulnerable young women and their children. “We failed to respect the inherent dignity of the women and children who came to the home. We failed to offer them the compassion that they so badly needed. We were part of the system in which they suffered hardship, loneliness and terrible hurt. We acknowledge in particular that infants and children who died at the home were buried in a disrespectful and unacceptable way.”
This extraordinary excavation will not, however, answer all the questions first raised by Corless. It is entirely possible the archaeologists will not be able to find and identify 796 individual sets of remains that have lain buried and mixed together for so long.
It is also possible that there are not 796 sets of remains and that some death records were falsified to cover up the widespread and illicit adoption of thousands of children of unmarried mothers, including a transatlantic trade that has been likened to child trafficking.
“My sister could be an eightysomething lady living in Canada or New York,” McKay says. “She’s doing her shopping, she picks up a paper and she says to her daughter, ‘There’s a terrible story about a place called Tuam in the west of Ireland.’ And she will never know that that is her story.”
And what of the other mother and baby homes across Ireland? An estimated 9,000 children died in these institutions. The last one to shut its doors was Bessborough, near Cork, which remained in operation until 1998. Records for that home show 923 children died there. Only 64 were buried in marked graves. The Times, 17/10/2025
WBC- He’s obviously a top man,and the knuckle draggers want in as its part of his CV….
Let us hope that all of those expressing outrage at the decision by Birmingham’s Safety Advisory Group (which issues safety certificates for football matches) to ban supporters of Tel Aviv Maccabi from attending the game at Villa Park, a decision supported by both The Football Policing Unit and West Midland Police, will be similarly outraged by the murder of eleven members of a Palestinian family in the Zeitoun district of Gaza City. Now, this family was not trying to go to a football match but rather were travelling back, in some kind of bus I think, to try and inspect their family home as was, after, as in after, the declaration of a ‘ceasefire’ on Monday. Apparently they crossed over the ‘yellow line’ instituted by the IDF (who should rename themselves the IDS as in the “Israeli Death Squads”) a line which is not defined clearly or otherwise ergo it is an imaginary line one you do not know you are crossing until such times you are hit by a tank shell that is and your family destroyed and I mean literally,, in what has to be one of the most cowardly murders of the many the IDS have carried out over in recent times. Maybe that is the ‘yellow’ part of the line. So let us hear it from Starmer, from KemiKazi and all the rest, not about a football ban, but about how Palestinian families should be allowed to return (a quest since 1948) without being blown up, after a ceasefire, by a murderous army who obviously have not yet heard the news.
What a sherman tank?
That must have taken me about 30 or 40 seconds to scroll by. That’s no fair.
Did I miss a reference on BBC Sportsound,but why was a large photograph on display of Ange so ptominent on the studio set?
prominent
“There’s a buzz about the place”….
Ange, Ange, Ange…..you made a lot of money….but you cold have made your name if you’d stayed at Celtic…
Was it worth it?….
I’ve never understood why some people revel in “woe is me” type indie music…..
Here’s a tune to make you move…
https://youtu.be/ATXxbHsR7iY?si=gZ6pncQJGiW1dyqC
Even the English far right ordinary workers, are comrades with the Unlawfully Sacked Care Workers from Ireland.
There will be NO Unification if there is NO Unity.
The Workers Party of Britain will Unite everybody vs the evil Lobby.
Lab/Lib/Gre/Snp/Ref/Con are all united AGAINST the 99% of People Uniting.
https://x.com/JaydaBF/status/1979645130274701472#m
What will Timmy do? lol
The reason that I ask is because 3 times already Tims voted against Jeremy Corbyn, and that has placed us onto the lap of The New World Order.
Meaning that Celtic and every name on their databases will be banned out of the new digital prison, for antisemitism with starvation being the only outcome, anyone who tries to help you will also be locked out.
In fact we are now at the stage were only MILLIONS of Guy Fawkes operatives is the only way out.
If you can’t vote them out….well what does that leave?
HH
oot.
Burnley78 @ 7:26 pm,
Can’t see the context for your most recent pop at Brendan Rodgers.
We all need to get behind the Manager and team at Dens Park today.
KTF
COYBIG
Dundee 0 – 3 Celtic
Hail Hail
https://bsky.app/profile/aljazeera.com/post/3m3jmr6efma2o
Al Jazeera English
@aljazeera.com
· 14m
At least 38 Palestinians have been killed as the Israeli army commits 47 violations of ceasefire agreement.
The genocide continues, the Zionist plan for a greater Israel continues
The most moral army in the world continues to murder women and children who have no homes
Good luck to Brendan and the Bhoys as they travel the road and miles to Dundee
Ash Sarker dropping truth bombs on BBC Question time, a rarity! I never watch this crap but caught up on YT
The disaster that was Thatcher and privatisation haunts us
https://youtu.be/9H9GDwsRVh4?si=NdQilCW44P6r4YR2
A very wet morning before the game
Celtic 7-1. 68 years ago.Worth a mention on this cold, wet Sunday morning.
Oh Hampden in the sun…we scored SEVEN they got one….
Look at Life Vol 4 Sport Saturday Fever
Look back on time when football at weekend was Saturday
Then Television, then Sky, Progress is it
https://youtu.be/V9eQGOKkee0?si=nVCJYRpvRsMaEzMB
aff oot
A wee story from last night’s Huddle Down Under dinner in Melbourne, showing the generosity of the Celtic and Kane (aka Kano) family. Kano’s brother – Paul – won a signed, framed team jersey in the raffle last nite and immediately put it up for auction. Without a minute’s hesitation, special guest ex-Celt Alan Thompson got out his seat and ran the auction single handedly. With a starting bid of $500, Thommo got the shirt up to a winning bid of $3700 – with monies from the auction again going to the Kano Foundation. So much generosity in the room and a superb gesture from Paul – and ultra-pro work by Thommo in driving a superb auction result. Organisers said there were no raffle tickets left and Willie Wallace’s wife Olive – a sprightly companion to the Lisbon Lion legend, drew all the winning tickets from the champagne bucket. Thompson and Willie Wallace ran an unscripted but genuine charm offensive; both were generous with time and photos. Smashing night had by all.
PS:
WEEBOBBYCOLLINS – re Muscat’s Aussie team; Melb Victory had no particular reputation for rough-house fitba, but they were continually competitive and fired up under his guidance. He could be good for the currants.
The ragers are hummin…
lionsroar67
Thanks for posting that great little feature from Cliff Michelmore.
And his allusion to “The Celtic”
Dont mind midweek kickoffs, wont even mind the 8pm Saturday k/o against St Mirren but I do hope that even with matches being broadcast 3pm on a Saturday will once again become the norm and not the exception.
Blimey – now it’s Brendan’s fault that Hearts are winning games. Gets more bizarre by the day.
Maybe not a bad thing that Maeda will have to miss a game or two but without having to drop him. Would like Jamesey to get a start.
Shuggiebhoy67 on 19th October 2025 12:20 am
Did I miss a reference on BBC Sportsound,but why was a large photograph on display of Ange so ptominent on the studio set?
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Aye, it was a joke, Shuggiebhoy67. Typical of our national broadcaster right enough — can’t help themselves when it comes to anything connected to Celtic. Ange gets sacked down south and instead of reporting it properly, Sportsound sticks a big picture of him on the table like they’re having a laugh at our expense. No mention of the sacking, no context, just a cheap wee visual dig. It’s petty, unprofessional, and exactly what folk mean when they say the BBC’s got an agenda. We pay a licence fee for that nonsense? Embarrassing stuff.