Sir Kenny Dalglish undergoing treatment for cancer

One of the greatest players ever to pull on a Celtic jersey, Sir Kenny Dalglish has confirmed he is undergoing cancer treatment – news that has stopped the football world in its tracks and hit the Celtic family hard.

Sir Kenny Dalglish, 75, has confirmed he is currently undergoing treatment for cancer, revealing the diagnosis through an inadvertent social media post before issuing a characteristically dignified statement requesting privacy for himself and his family. In that statement, he noted with typical dry humour: “Unlike my mobile phone use, the treatment is going well.”

For Celtic supporters, this news carries a particular weight. Dalglish arrived at Celtic Park as a teenager in 1969 and spent eight years there, making 320 appearances and scoring 167 goals – a record that places him among the most prolific and influential players ever to represent the club. He won four league titles and four Scottish Cups during that period, operating at the heart of a Celtic side that dominated Scottish football under Jock Stein, and doing so with a quality of touch, intelligence and ruthlessness in front of goal that set him apart from almost everyone else on the park.

It was those years in the Hoops that shaped Dalglish into the player Liverpool paid a then-British record £440,000 to sign in 1977 – and everything that followed at Anfield was built on foundations laid in the east end of Glasgow. He made 515 appearances for Liverpool, winning three European Cups and eight First Division titles as a player, before being appointed player-manager in 1985 and adding three further league titles and two FA Cups to that extraordinary haul. His leadership of the club and the wider football community through the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989 – a role for which he was eventually knighted in 2018 – stands as one of the most humane acts of leadership British football has ever seen. He also holds Scotland’s all-time caps record with 102 international appearances, sharing the national record of 30 goals with Denis Law.

The news comes just a day after fellow Liverpool great Kevin Keegan revealed his own stage four cancer diagnosis – a painful coincidence that has cast a long shadow across the football community this week. Ian Rush, speaking on behalf of so many who know Dalglish personally, put it simply: “If anyone can face this battle with courage and determination, it’s King Kenny.” That sentiment, by all accounts, is shared by supporters from Celtic Park to Anfield and well beyond.

The thoughts and best wishes of every Celtic supporter are with Sir Kenny, Marina, and the entire Dalglish family. Come on, Kenny.

About Author

Alasdair Munn

Alasdair Munn has followed Celtic through thick and thin since his father first took him to Parkhead as a young boy growing up in Stirling. That early experience shaped a lifelong devotion to the club and a genuine curiosity about the stories, characters, and moments that have defined Celtic across the decades. He brings that long-view perspective to everything he writes, believing the history of the club is just as important as whatever is happening on the pitch this weekend. His writing tends to focus on the deeper currents running through Celtic life: the cultural identity of the support, the significance of the club within the broader Scottish and Irish diaspora story, and the way football intersects with community. He has a particular fondness for the less-told tales, the players who never quite made the headlines, the matches that deserve to be remembered, and the supporters whose loyalty kept the club standing during difficult years. When he is not writing or watching football, Alasdair can usually be found walking the hills of Central Scotland, arguing about music, or reading history that has absolutely nothing to do with football. He contributes to The Celtic Star because he believes the club deserves writing that respects both its past and its supporters.

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