Celtic will face old foes Rapid Vienna on 9 July

Rapid Vienna have confirmed full details relating to their friendly with Celtic next month, via the Austrian club’s official website.

Celtic will be the visitors to the Allianz Stadium on 9 July with the friendly match kicking-off at 6pm local time – that’s 5pm Celtic Park Time. For those planning on attending some of the pre-season matches in the continent this one will cost you between €12 and €18.99 for a ticket, with presumably no problems on getting tickets.

Celtic now have one more pre-season match to be confirmed with games already announced against Banik Ostrava, Legia Warsaw, Norwich, Blackburn Rovers and now Rapid Vienna. The one outstanding date is 6 July and we’ll no doubt be hearing about any details as they are confirmed.

The doors open at Lennoxtown tomorrow as pre-season training gets underway for the players who were not involved in international duty this month.

To Celtic supporters of a certain vintage Rapid Vienna are a regarded with justifiable distain and dislike for the way they cheated Celtic out of a chance to reach a European final back in 1984. Celtic lost the first leg 3-1 in Vienna but in a brilliant performance at Celtic Park the Austrians were sent packing or so we thought. Celtic won the match 3-0 but a half bottle of Voka was thrown from the Jungle, onto the pitch. It didn’t make contact with anyone but the cheat reacted as if he’d been hit by a sniper’s bullet and got stretched off.

UEFA unbelievably ordered a repay at least 100 miles away from Celtic Park so we all headed down to Manchester to play them at Old Trafford – a real dump back in 1984 – and that night it had the most hostile of atmospheres ever witnessed from the Celtic support.

They won that game 1-0, some retribution was had and they went on to reach the final where thankfully Everton cuffed them 4-1. But the fall-out from the night at Old Trafford and the game at Celtic Park didn’t stop there. Celtic were told to play our first home game the next season behind closed doors.

Atletico Madrid were the visitors – another old enemy of Celtic’s – and after a draw in Spain we lost the second leg with no Celtic supporters in the ground.

Many supporters in the 1980s reckoned that this incidents were the beginning of the decline in Celtic’s fortunes for and noted that Aberdeen had won the Cup Winners Cup the previous year and Dundee United reached the UEFA Cup final – that season was Celtic’s chance in the early 1980s to get to a final and we were cheated out of it by Rapid Vienna, possible corruption at UEFA and the weakness of the old Celtic Board who should never have accepted the decision to replay that game.

Someone in our support threw that bottle. Must have been ashamed at the damage that action caused.

Jim Craig, writing on The Celtic Star told the story of those three games against Rail Vienna in 984.

“The first leg of the Cup Winners’ Cup 2nd round tie between Rapid Vienna and Celtic – held in the Austrian capital – resulted in a fine 3-1 victory for Rapid, with Brian McClair getting the Hoops’ only goal.

“Two weeks later came the return at Celtic Park, which attracted a crowd of 48,613. It started brightly enough as a contest but soon descended into a shambles, with one Rapid player sent off, another leaving the field with his head swathed in bandages and the whole Austrian team, plus those on the touchlines, complaining about decisions made by the referee.

“Celtic won 3-0, ostensibly taking the tie 4-3 on aggregate but Rapid took their case to the ultimate authority and UEFA ordered that the game be replayed at a ground more than 100 miles from Celtic Park.

“Old Trafford was the chosen venue and the two sides ran out at Manchester on this day in 1984 for the deciding tie. It was a very emotional occasion and the Celtic players could not find the form they had previously shown.

“Rapid left-winger Pacult broke away in the 17th minute to slam the ball past Pat Bonner and that proved to be the only goal of the game. Even more disastrously for Celtic, a ‘supposed’ fan raced on to the pitch to attack the goal-scorer, an incident which once again brought the club to the attention of UEFA.”

If you were at any of these games against Rapid Vienna in 1984 we’d love to hear from you. Please post your recollections of any of these three games below or email editor@thecelticstar.co.uk and we’ll share for you.

About Author

The Celtic Star founder and editor, who has edited numerous Celtic books over the past decade or so including several from Lisbon Lions, Willie Wallace, Tommy Gemmell and Jim Craig. Earliest Celtic memories include a win over East Fife at Celtic Park and the 4-1 League Cup loss to Partick Thistle as a 6 year old. Best game? Easy 4-2, 1979 when Ten Men Won the League. Email editor@thecelticstar.co.uk

3 Comments

  1. Was at Glasgow + Manchester games , I know was a long time ago but never forgotten what they did regarding cheating at celtic Park- so its a no no for me !

    • Gerard F Reilly on

      The so called custodians soiled their pants , cowardly refused to stand up for the club at any stage of the FARCE which was 100% obvious to ANYONE with eyesight that we were being taken for fekn CLOWNS , which matched the Board behaving like CLOWNS…..NO WAY I.d agree to communication with those cheating bstds EVER most hoops fans would’ve accepted gifting the scumbags the TIE rather than salt in the wounds by agreeing to the lunacy of a 3rd unnecessary 90 mins of torture “

  2. Chas McGuire on

    Was at the Celtic Park and Old Trafford games. Rapid Vienna were a good side but the home game saw an outstanding Celtic performance, that should have ended up 5-0 or 6-0. Celtic blitzed Rapid Vienna that night through their great play, but the Austrians lost their heads and the game ended up in chaos, with the long delay quite late on after one of their players feigned injury from the bottle that was chucked on the park.
    I didn’t initially feel that worried about the repercussions, as it was obvious they had cheated. Rapid’s case was thrown out but they appealed and won it. I read somewhere that the appeal meeting was barely quorate and that the SFA delegate was not there, meaning we had no representation. It all seemed corrupt and Celtic should never have entertained UEFA’s ruling.

    The atmosphere and the game in Manchester was horrible and it all hinged on a passage of play, where Roy Aitken hit the post and they cleared the ball upfield and scored. From memory, Celtic never really settled into that game – our play was frantic and not fluent at all, the sense of injustice overshadowed everything. But had Roy scored, we might have pulled it back again. There were over 40,000 Celtic fans there and a fair few thousand Man Utd fans. They were playing Dundee Utd in the UEFA Cup that same night up at Tannadice, having drawn 2-2 at home in the 1st leg. That was a topsy-turvy game that ended up 3-2 to Man Utd, I remember their fans kept cheering at Old Trafford every time they got news of a goal.
    Its all a long time ago, but it was a travesty that such a good Celtic side were denied the chance to have a real European run – who knows how far we might have got. But we’re in a much better place than Rapid are now — I can’t remember the last time Rapid Vienna won their title, they have been miles behind Red Bull Salzburg for donkeys years.