At long last in summer 2000, Celtic got the right man. For four successive years we had begun the season with a new man in charge, and this time, we got Martin O’Neill, a man with a proven record, and this time we backed him with money as well to buy players, notably Chris Sutton.
The effect was immediate. Martin O’Neill earned his spurs in the Demolition Derby, and for that season, apart from Europe, we never looked back as we earned our first treble since 1969 with Henrik Larsson clearly world class.
In his five years, Martin won the League three times, the Scottish Cup three times and the League Cup once.
Ironically his most famous season – the Seville experience of 2003 – was the only one of his five where we won nothing! “Taking the eye off the ball” was hardly appropriate, but in the wake of our triumph over Liverpool, we went down to Rangers in the League Cup final and then, with a strange team selection, we lost up at Inverness in the Scottish Cup.
Then we lost the League on a heartbreaking Sunday after Seville. We had possibly spread ourselves too thin, but we still had the bitter sweet experience of the Spanish sun to remember.
We bounced back with a Double in 2003/04 and with a defeat of Barcelona into the bargain, but 2005 is still recalled as “Black Sunday”. It was an accident looking for a place to happen. In the run in, we managed to lose at home to both Hearts and Hibs (a very unusual occurrence) and the danger signal was up.
We had gone stale, and O’Neill was increasingly worried about his domestic problems. Things imploded piteously at Fir Park that awful Sunday, but with his final throw of the dice, O’Neill still managed to win the Scottish Cup before he departed. He returned to manage in England and with the Irish national side. His performances were respectable, but his glory years were with Celtic.
If Tommy Burns as Manager gave us back our self-respect in 1995, Martin O’Neill gave us back our glory in the 2000s. If Stein and Maley gave us our golden years around 1967 and 1908, then Martin’s years were silver. Not quite golden, but glorious all the same, and to be looked back with happiness and affection, and light years away from what we had seen in the 1990s!
We remain grateful to this man who is still happy to describe himself as a Celtic supporter.
David Potter
HUGE SAVINGS IN THE CELTIC STAR’S SUMMER SALE!
The Celtic Star’s book promotion has been so successful, with hundreds of books at great prices being posted to Celtic fans all over the world, that we’ve decided to continue with the sale until the end of July. We’ve reduced all six books currently available from their usual retail price of £20 and prices are as low as £6 (see below).
All books are high quality hardback, with some signed by the author. And it’s also worth noting that you only pay postage on one book, so it’s free for the second, third and so on. ORDER HERE or click on The Celtic Star image above…this is how it feels to be Celtic!