Manager clarifies Paulo Bernardo’s situation at Celtic

Showing 2 of 3

Celtic must formally recognising Celtic Fans Collective…

Michael Nicholson,

Michael Nicholson, Chief Executive of Celtic FC looks on from the stands prior to the Premiership match between Celtic FC and St Mirren FC at Celtic Park on May 17, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

After 28 days of silence from the boardroom, three separate protests, and the uniting of more than 400 supporter groups under the Celtic Fans Collective, Celtic FC have finally reached out to fan organisations for discussions…

Celtic fan protest at Firhill

Celtic fan protest. Partick Thistle v Celtic. Premier Sports League Cup. Sunday 21 September. Photo Vagelis Georgariou (The Celtic Star)

A meeting has been scheduled for Monday, October 6th, with Michael Nicholson and Chris McKay set to represent the club.

Below is the full statement issued by the Celtic Fans Collective following confirmation of the meeting –

Celtic Fans Collective

Celtic Fans Collective, Founded September 2025.

‘This evening, Celtic fan organisations received an invitation from Celtic FC to attend a meeting with the club on Monday 6th October to discuss ongoing concerns about the running of the club.

‘In conjunction with the Celtic Fans Collective, supporter organisations have accepted this invitation. Celtic FC’s representatives will include Michael Nicholson and Chris McKay.

‘We welcome the club’s decision to meet and engage directly on the issues raised. However, we remain under no illusions about the scale of change still required at board level.

‘As a result of this development, the planned continuation of the “3-match silence” has been postponed, in good faith, in the hope and expectation that supporters will now receive full and honest communication from the club.

‘We thank every supporter who has stood behind this campaign and helped bring the Celtic board to the table. Without this unity, it would not have been possible. It highlights the strength and influence of a united Celtic support.

‘The Celtic Fans Collective will continue its campaign irrespective of the outcome of this meeting, with the clear aim of securing meaningful, positive change for the betterment of Celtic Football Club and its supporters.’

At his pre-match press conference, Brendan Rodgers was asked about the impact of a potentially subdued atmosphere on his team, and whether it might play into the hands of opposition sides used to hostile environments.

Rodgers responded, “I think that obviously Celtic Park is renowned for its atmosphere and what it can do to the opponent. So it’s probably something, in all fairness, you would have to ask the other team. But I suppose my message is, probably for the longer term, is that hopefully both parties can sit down and respect the differences and find a solution so that we can all pull together again. Because that’s what’s always key here for Celtic.”

While the invitation marks progress, and the postponement of the silent protest a positive reciprocal action, controversy surrounds who has been asked to attend. Despite its size and influence, the Celtic Fans Collective was not named among the invited groups. Instead, the club contacted ‘recognised’ supporter organisations, requesting that each submit up to two named representatives before the meeting.

Some Steering Group members of the Collective will be present in their capacity as representatives of their own groups, but it seems, not directly as delegates of the Collective itself. To some supporters, this omission may perhaps be viewed as a red flag and a potential attempt by the board to divide and conquer.

The exclusion of the Collective has raised suspicion that the club intends to control the narrative by dictating who can, and cannot, represent fans. Some argue that the invited groups should have declined until the Collective was formally included. Others believe attending is absolutely the correct move, but with the condition that future communication should be directed through the Collective.

This meeting represents a major test of the Collective’s unity. If groups stand together and act in concert, the board will find it harder to drive wedges between them. If not, the campaign risks losing momentum.

Your Silence is Deafening banner in the North Curve

Your Silence is Deafening banner in the North Curve. Celtic v Hibernian, Scottish Premiership, Celtic Park, 27 September 2025. Photo Stuart Wallace IMAGO Shutterstock

Despite these concerns, most fans agree that the meeting is at least a positive first step. The “3-match silence” protest has been paused, not ended, and the Collective insists their campaign will continue regardless of what is said on Monday night. The seven questions put to the board by the Collective remain unanswered.

On Monday evening, Celtic supporters will get their first real indication of whether the board intends to meet fans in good faith, or whether the dialogue is just another attempt to pacify. And this meeting should be the chance for the Celtic Board to formally recognise the Celtic Fans Collective because it’s not going away.

Niall J

Continue reading on the next page…

Showing 2 of 3

About Author

A current fourth year student studying History and Journalism, Media and Communications at the University of Strathclyde and now writing regularly about the Hoops for The Celtic Star.

Welcome to our Live Comments section, where new comments will appear automatically

2 Comments

  1. i’d believe the dog in the street before i’d believe rodgers

    Paulo pack your bags this frauds not gonna give you game time

  2. Until I couldn’t stand my skin crawling constantly, I studied and implemented this corporate divide and conquer strategy in a former executive role. There’s literally manuals originating out of private think tanks on how to gaslight populations over everything from what toothpaste is effective (it’s not) to whether tanks are appropriate at political uprisings…Here is basic summary. Spread it around the protest collective:

    The Dangling Carrot Playbook

    A long-running psychological operation that dangles the carrot is best understood as a protracted influence operation or strategic deception campaign. It keeps people engaged, compliant, or hopeful by presenting the illusion of progress or reward—always just out of reach.

    How It Works

    Gradual Conditioning:
    People are nudged to believe change is happening. Even when it does, it’s framed to serve the psyop — reinforcing the illusion of progress.

    Shifting Goalposts:
    Expectations are constantly adjusted—just enough to maintain faith in the system.

    Perpetual Near-Breakthroughs:
    The promised reward or event is always almost here, but never actually materializes.

    Weaponized Hope:
    Hope itself becomes the trap—keeping people from walking away or questioning the narrative.