European Adventures Supporting Celtic – Liam Kelly’s Misfortune In Munich, Part 1

Yesterday on the eve of the new season when supporter, thankfully, are going to be allowed back into games – although sadly not the away games in the European qualifiers – we started a new series looking back at European away day adventures, beginning with Matt Corr’s trip to Athens in August 2018.

This morning it’s the turn of Liam Kelly who tells the story of his trip to Munich in 2017 to watch Celtic….

Liam Kelly’s Memories Of Watching Celtic Abroad For The First Time: Misfortune In Munich…

Though my first ever game (Liverpool 0-2 Celtic) in 2003, as a six year old, was a European away match; it wasn’t until I went to Munich in 2017 that I travelled abroad to watch Celtic. In the intervening years, I had been to countless games in Scotland, both on the domestic and European scenes, but now I was in a position where I could afford to go away with my pals to watch the football.

I was heading over with a friend, Paul, from Belfast, who had recently moved to Dorset, where I lived. He booked the flights, I booked the hotel – both went horribly wrong!

We got the bus up to London Victoria on the Monday morning. All was in order and as we had five hours to kill, we headed to the bank of the Thames for a few beers. Next, it was a bus across to Stansted Airport and that’s where things went pear shaped. An eerie yellow sky loomed overhead, showing all the hallmarks of an apocalyptic storm. Nothing materialised in England, but we soon received a phone call from a Celtic Supporters Club in Ireland, who had our match tickets. They told us how a hurricane had been sweeping across the Emerald Isle and they were unsure if they would be able to fly over to Germany. We digested the news with the airport bar’s double vodka deal, two for £14(!), before realising that our flight was also delayed due to the weather. Of all the things to halt your travel, a killer hurricane in Ireland and the residue of that storm hitting England was the last thing we could have anticipated.

Finally, we got the call to go to the gate and the wheels were in motion. The departure lounge was dotted with green and white jerseys, and the sound of Irish Soldier Laddie could be heard from a passenger’s mobile phone.

We arrived in Munich quite late and were surprised to find that not much was open in the way of nightlife. Nevertheless, we heard fragments of Celtic songs in the wind just outside Munich Central Station and decided to investigate. The noise led us to a boxing themed sports pub, where a number of Celtic fans who had come over a few days early, had gathered.

It was a good night, going through the full Celtic and Irish repertoire, and the few locals out on this Monday evening seemed to be pleased by our presence… all excluding one. This said German appeared to take a dislike to Celtic, and to our company’s exuberance in particular. The smiles that greeted us that evening were replaced by a middle finger, along with what I can only assume is the German equivalent of “Screw Celtic.”

We advised him to move away so we could enjoy our pints in peace and he complied. However, it was at that point that my Belfast pal realised his bank card was no longer in his pocket. “That bar steward I knew he was dodgy!” He screamed, preparing to sprint after our local ‘friend’, until I turned to spot his card on the floor and grabbed him back to his bar stool. We both laughed and enjoyed ourselves until closing.

At this point the nightmare really began. I took out the paperwork for the hotel and had absolutely no idea which train to get. The Booking.com reviews suggested it was ideally located for travel from the city, so we approached a taxi driver to get a lift. He gave us a blank look, googled the address and said “You know this is miles away?” Nevertheless, we jumped in and arrived at the hotel 45 minutes later, having spent 40 euros. The hotel was one of the most bizzare I’ve ever seen. It was in a disused industrial estate, with abandoned buses everywhere. We pushed open the creaky door, walking around what seemed to be the set of a horror movie. Then, I noticed there was no reception desk and no sign of life in the building. It was midnight and we were now stranded in the middle of nowhere.

A German shepherd barking on the end of a police officer’s lead startled me in the dark. She quizzed us in German, before we tried to ask what happened to the hotel, but the language barrier could not be overcome. At that point, we sat on the pavement without a beer, without a bed and without a soul around.

I phoned Booking.com to explain the situation and they said that they would find us alternative accommodation within the hour. 90 minutes passed without a word, so I phoned back, only to be told that we would have to apply for a refund when back home, but that it was our own responsibility to find another hotel. Paul grabbed the phone and said “Right you listen here, that’s not flaming good enough,” at which point my phone ran out of battery and we were now not only stuck, but we had no way of navigating anywhere!

We walked around aimlessly before finding a taxi parked up in a dark alley. Under no other circumstances would I approach it, but needs must and it turned out okay as we got back to the city square – costing us another 40 euros. Once there, we tried every hotel in sight, yet as it was the early hours of Tuesday by this point, all the hotels were full with Celtic fans travelling over for the match, which was being played on the Wednesday.

It was ridiculously cold so the defeated Bournemouth and Belfast boys that we were, headed to the underground to keep warm. We jumped on random train after random train, until we found a shop open at one station and stocked up on Magners. It was our only hope of seeing through the night.

Come 6am we staggered across Central Station and patiently waited for the supermarket to open. A surreal moment then occurred when one wag walked topless through the station belting out the Belfast Brigade. I had assumed that he was a drunk Celtic fan, yet when he was halted by police for setting fire to a bin, he started arguing in fluent German, before shouting to us in English that he was allowed out of his psychiatric home and produced papers to prove it!

I’d suggested to Paul that we should see if we could get a train back towards our hotel, and give the place another try in the daylight. By the time we worked out where to go, it was rush hour. Drunk and exhausted we crammed onto the train, before realising that despite being on the correct line, we were going the wrong way. We ended up in Frankfurt! I immediately ran to the toilet at Frankfurt Station, where I had to vomit. It was then, at my most uncomfortable moment, that I received a phone call telling me that the train was heading back to Munich in 30 seconds… cue the hardest sprint of my life as I jumped on board just before the doors closed.

We’d had enough. The plan was instantly changed to get to a McDonalds and charge our phones there, that way we could look for another hotel online and see if our match tickets were heading over from Ireland after all.

Good news came through on the ticket front, but no hotel or hostel was available in the city for anything under £300 per night. All that remained was to head to the Irish bar and try to make the best of things. Once there, we met a Celtic fan (Craig) over from Stirling with his Dad and Brother. He kindly let us go up to their hostel for a shower and then used his powers of persuasion to plead our case with a nearby hotel, who despite being full, eventually agreed to chuck a couple of beds into an empty utility room for us at a cost of £240 for two nights. After 36 hours awake and as many bottles of Magners, it was time for some rest.

By the time we woke up, Paul had several missed calls from a pal of his nicknamed Stripey Cat! Stripey hadn’t booked a hotel and the plan had been for him and his entourage to crash on our hotel floor. However, circumstances had dictated otherwise and in our exhaustion we had failed to communicate with him. By the time we returned the call, Stripey and co were at a hotel in the Bavarian mountains, where one of his friends had clogged the sink with vomit after overindulging on lager. The journey to the hotel came at a cost of 100 euros and it’s fair to say we weren’t in the good books.

After all the mayhem and lost money, the trip was finally about to get enjoyable. I received a text from a friend, who had flown over from Southampton. He was at the main square and said the place was jumping, so we immediately headed there via the supermarket where we could get a few cans to keep us hydrated in the evening sun.

Everything had gone! Therefore, we had to buy a crate of lager from a local restaurant and headed to the square for a sing song. We met my pals over from Southampton, told them the story of what had happened and before long we decided to get the train out of the city to a gig that had been put on for Celtic fans. The venue held 2000 people. It was packed to the rafters and absolutely rocking. Glasnevin entertained us with the songs of Celtic and Ireland, whilst the fans belted out the Stuart Armstrong on every occasion that the band paused between songs. This was why we had made the trip.

A DJ came on, playing flute band songs which got the crowd going after Glasnevin’s set; before the Irish Brigade took to the stage and opened up with the Lonesome Boatman. Bedlam! What a night.

Our position at the gig, as Glasnevin play to a packed crowd

To be continued…

Liam Kelly

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

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