Kerryfail Meltdown - Yes, they are nutjobs!

I’m guessing they will bury their heads in the sand and just not mention it
I don't have a login for their bile-factory of a site.
But please, those who do, post their reactions to their board admitting they harboured and protected paedophiles.
I don’t have a login but you can still view as a guest. Had a look and it’s tumbleweed…,
 
He has shown he by his co comms yesterday he is an employee of Celtic

BBS are a disgrace
He clearly is. I've literally just seen the sportscene highlights as aired on Saturday night due to being abroad last week. Good God Almighty. A more biased set of rubbish you will never hear. Even sutton, hartson, walker etc seem less partisan at this moment, though I know that feeling won't last long. According to mick stewart, every single thing the sc*m did was brilliant and every refereeing decision in the sc*m's favour was spot on, while everything we did had a huge slice of luck, the refereeing decisions in our favour were wrong and the sc*m should have won. Well, I've got news for you mick. They didn't. You should never be allowed back inside Ibrox again.
 
Correct by the rules.Hmmm


In summary you do not go back to the original foul if they have the opportunity to reset.
Silva ram 80 yards with the ball and when the cross which led to the ball eventually reached Dessers there were several of their players in defensive situations indicating they reset.
Not only were their players in defensive situations, Two of them played the ball before Dessers scored.
Fair enough we probably gained possession illegally but thems the rules and VAR disregarded that.
 
Not only were their players in defensive situations, Two of them played the ball before Dessers scored.
Fair enough we probably gained possession illegally but thems the rules and VAR disregarded that.
There is no following rules here come on now that’s just being crazy, add the Celtic letter to ask about the penalty decision and the keep the waters muddy. Always cheated never defeated. It is all so predictable .
 
Cancel the increase in the away ticket allocation , the Savillers don't feel safe

Celtic Are Right To Be Concerned. Ibrox Remains Manifestly Unsafe.​

Photo of James ForrestJames Forrest|18:16 08/04/24

In the middle of last month, the media were told that a deal had been reached between Celtic and the Ibrox club over the return of away fans to the fixture as of next season; around 2500-3000 will be available for the games apiece; it was hailed as a breakthrough.

In fact, if you read the small print, it was only one up to a point, and there was to be a determination from Celtic as to whether certain of our club’s concerns were being taken seriously before we would proceed to offer them an allocation for our ground and accept one for theirs.

Yesterday, John Kennedy was hit by objects thrown at the Celtic dugout. Now we see footage showing that Matt O’Riley was also targeted. The Ibrox club has been far too lax in protecting our people up until now; nobody should believe them when they talk about the safety of our supporters. It is inconceivable that we would subject our fans to that sort of thing.

Celtic are more than a little concerned at this, and we should be. It is out of control over there. That is not a safe stadium for our team to visit, let alone our fans. Next season’s ticket settlement depends on the safety of the fans; I would not be surprised if we added the safety of our players and staff to the growing list of concerns. This is, after all, not a first offence.

“It has been confirmed today that a glass bottle was thrown at Matt at yesterday’s match. The repeated targeting of our players and staff with missiles is quite appalling and completely unacceptable. We have already raised our serious concerns with Rangers and understand that police are investigating the matter,” said Celtic’s second statement of the weekend.
“Appalling and completely unacceptable.” Those are the words that jump out. But so too is the reference to “serious concerns.” A Celtic staff member was hit on the head with a bottle a couple of years ago. We cannot allow this to become the new normal there.
On 29 March last year, one of their fans, Alan Crawford, was jailed for 12 months for launching the bottle that struck Daniel Friel, our physio. It required four stitches and left a permanent scar. This is what the sherif said at the time;

“This was an attack on a man in the course of his employment. The throwing of a bottle was not only an act of mindless violence but it had significant consequences for the person you injured and will stay with him for the rest of his life. The court must ensure that this grave conduct at events such as this is discouraged and the public protected. A custodial sentence is the only appropriate method to deal with you due to the gravity of the offence and the use of a bottle as a weapon.”

Here is what is astonishing about that incident; Crawford was sitting in the “corporate seats” when he did this. This was one of the upper crust, a guy sitting in the high value seats, a guy who had probably hobnobbed with the top brass.

The case of Lee Findlay is at the other end of the scale; he was 17 when he hit a Celtic fan on the head with a bottle that he found lying on the ground inside the stadium; he picked it up and launched it into our supporters without a second’s thought, and it hit a fan on the head. He escaped a custodial sentence because of his age, but he got a five-year banning order.

The situation at that ground is serious. The impulse that compels both young kids and guys in the rich seats to do these things is the same one. It’s the same one that saw our assistant manager and one of our players targeted yesterday, and these are the incidents which we know about, the ones that are of a high enough profile to get headlines.

If you look at social media, you’ll know that there was severe disorder in the Gallowgate on Saturday night, and a cache of weapons was found in Glasgow Green. This is a Celtic area, filled with our fans, which was attacked by their supporters.

That’s what we’re talking about here, although the media has done its best to dance around that fact and called it an “Old Firm” fight. But that’s not what it was, of course; this was a deliberate attack on a Celtic fan area and people out for a Saturday night drink being forced to defend themselves. Again, this is not an isolated incident.
Celtic will take a long hard look at what Ibrox does about this, if anything. And we will base and future decision to take tickets for that ground – and thus whether to give any for ours – on what the response to this will be. If our fans are to be truly protected then every supporter who enters that ground for one of these games should be searched by police; yes, that will entail fans arriving long before games kick off, but that’s just too bad.

The SPFL should also start sanctioning clubs for this stuff. Ibrox’s previous history with it cannot be ignored, nor is it possible to suggest they are doing everything they can to assure the safety of our coaches and players, or our fans when they attend games there.
It is clear that Ibrox is a manifestly unsafe place for anyone of a Celtic persuasion. They even told a senior broadcast journalist – Chris Sutton – that they could not guarantee his safety there, a quite extraordinary claim and one that should have seen the SPFL step in immediately. But as usual they chose not to bother … and that’s part of why we’re here.

The police are going to have to step up to the plate too here, as they are clearly not performing as they should. Celtic is right to be concerned right across the boards. We cannot accept tickets for that ground, in whatever number, until this stuff is stamped out.
 
I imagine this is approximately what happened last time and led to the last minute call off.

A better playing surface obviously favours the better team

So they were probably not doing their utmost to have it at its best for our visit. Allow it to become as rough as possible whilst still being playable. Then the large volume of rain close to game day caught them out and too late to remedy it

I imagine all "inferior" teams play these kind of "tricks"
 
It’s dead easy. If it’s not a penalty for us then it wasn’t a foul for them at Dessers goal as both incidents had similar touches from the defending player so if it’s not a pen it’s not a foul on iwata.


My Grandson was moaning about the penalty yesterday until I pointed that very fact out, hopefully he'll tell his Dad :))

Stepson, Son in law and Grandson all mhank fans, I love them all to bits but by God its hard at times, I can't stand their scummy club.
 
Honestly thought they would have moved on from Sunday to concentrate on more pressing problems like their club eventually owning up to their decades of covering up for their Peadophile ring.

Na those defenders of morality and what’s right in the world are more interested in obsessing about a face painter for over a decade rather than focusing on the 300 children who were abused by Celtic which has potential caused 40 deaths of young men.

Needless to say no one should ever bring the biggest abuse scandal in world sporting history up as completely ignoring the issue worked out well for Jimmy Saviles victims.

They genuinely have a very strange moral compass.
 
Lol. The wind of course was not remotely a factor in the first half. (no excuses for us but it clearly affected the game both halves)
Donny Celt IS OBVIOUSLY WIND ASSISTED
Cancel the increase in the away ticket allocation , the Savillers don't feel safe

Celtic Are Right To Be Concerned. Ibrox Remains Manifestly Unsafe.​

Photo of James ForrestJames Forrest|18:16 08/04/24

In the middle of last month, the media were told that a deal had been reached between Celtic and the Ibrox club over the return of away fans to the fixture as of next season; around 2500-3000 will be available for the games apiece; it was hailed as a breakthrough.

In fact, if you read the small print, it was only one up to a point, and there was to be a determination from Celtic as to whether certain of our club’s concerns were being taken seriously before we would proceed to offer them an allocation for our ground and accept one for theirs.

Yesterday, John Kennedy was hit by objects thrown at the Celtic dugout. Now we see footage showing that Matt O’Riley was also targeted. The Ibrox club has been far too lax in protecting our people up until now; nobody should believe them when they talk about the safety of our supporters. It is inconceivable that we would subject our fans to that sort of thing.

Celtic are more than a little concerned at this, and we should be. It is out of control over there. That is not a safe stadium for our team to visit, let alone our fans. Next season’s ticket settlement depends on the safety of the fans; I would not be surprised if we added the safety of our players and staff to the growing list of concerns. This is, after all, not a first offence.

“It has been confirmed today that a glass bottle was thrown at Matt at yesterday’s match. The repeated targeting of our players and staff with missiles is quite appalling and completely unacceptable. We have already raised our serious concerns with Rangers and understand that police are investigating the matter,” said Celtic’s second statement of the weekend.
“Appalling and completely unacceptable.” Those are the words that jump out. But so too is the reference to “serious concerns.” A Celtic staff member was hit on the head with a bottle a couple of years ago. We cannot allow this to become the new normal there.
On 29 March last year, one of their fans, Alan Crawford, was jailed for 12 months for launching the bottle that struck Daniel Friel, our physio. It required four stitches and left a permanent scar. This is what the sherif said at the time;

“This was an attack on a man in the course of his employment. The throwing of a bottle was not only an act of mindless violence but it had significant consequences for the person you injured and will stay with him for the rest of his life. The court must ensure that this grave conduct at events such as this is discouraged and the public protected. A custodial sentence is the only appropriate method to deal with you due to the gravity of the offence and the use of a bottle as a weapon.”

Here is what is astonishing about that incident; Crawford was sitting in the “corporate seats” when he did this. This was one of the upper crust, a guy sitting in the high value seats, a guy who had probably hobnobbed with the top brass.

The case of Lee Findlay is at the other end of the scale; he was 17 when he hit a Celtic fan on the head with a bottle that he found lying on the ground inside the stadium; he picked it up and launched it into our supporters without a second’s thought, and it hit a fan on the head. He escaped a custodial sentence because of his age, but he got a five-year banning order.

The situation at that ground is serious. The impulse that compels both young kids and guys in the rich seats to do these things is the same one. It’s the same one that saw our assistant manager and one of our players targeted yesterday, and these are the incidents which we know about, the ones that are of a high enough profile to get headlines.

If you look at social media, you’ll know that there was severe disorder in the Gallowgate on Saturday night, and a cache of weapons was found in Glasgow Green. This is a Celtic area, filled with our fans, which was attacked by their supporters.

That’s what we’re talking about here, although the media has done its best to dance around that fact and called it an “Old Firm” fight. But that’s not what it was, of course; this was a deliberate attack on a Celtic fan area and people out for a Saturday night drink being forced to defend themselves. Again, this is not an isolated incident.
Celtic will take a long hard look at what Ibrox does about this, if anything. And we will base and future decision to take tickets for that ground – and thus whether to give any for ours – on what the response to this will be. If our fans are to be truly protected then every supporter who enters that ground for one of these games should be searched by police; yes, that will entail fans arriving long before games kick off, but that’s just too bad.

The SPFL should also start sanctioning clubs for this stuff. Ibrox’s previous history with it cannot be ignored, nor is it possible to suggest they are doing everything they can to assure the safety of our coaches and players, or our fans when they attend games there.
It is clear that Ibrox is a manifestly unsafe place for anyone of a Celtic persuasion. They even told a senior broadcast journalist – Chris Sutton – that they could not guarantee his safety there, a quite extraordinary claim and one that should have seen the SPFL step in immediately. But as usual they chose not to bother … and that’s part of why we’re here.

The police are going to have to step up to the plate too here, as they are clearly not performing as they should. Celtic is right to be concerned right across the boards. We cannot accept tickets for that ground, in whatever number, until this stuff is stamped out.
We should tell our fans not to throw things its not the Rangers way. We shoulda also offer the use of protective helmets to the helmets in their dug out.
 
There is one thing that is clear about this cretin he loves to twist words and write lies . Not a big surprise most Celtic bloggers are very similar but I'm delighted how much Clement gets under his skin.









Yeah because your manager is always getting pulled up for the clear and obvious lies he tells isn't he? Like that time he claimed there was never an 11 point gap and every journalist in the room pointed out there was. Like when he blames a VAR official for decisions correctly going against his team even though it's the ref who makes that decision. You mean those sorts of probing questions from the media? The journalists in Scotland got their press cards in a box of cornflakes. They're utterly useless at their job as evidenced by the last few decades of your clubs lies being allowed to be spread.
You're just a fat wank and the sooner your internet is cut off the better the world will be.
 
There is one thing that is clear about this cretin he loves to twist words and write lies . Not a big surprise most Celtic bloggers are very similar but I'm delighted how much Clement gets under his skin.










He talks one load of baws which is not surprising cause he looks like a Testicle.

Kyogo done this.


And this was Fat Agne’s response.

 
Cancel the increase in the away ticket allocation , the Savillers don't feel safe

Celtic Are Right To Be Concerned. Ibrox Remains Manifestly Unsafe.​

Photo of James ForrestJames Forrest|18:16 08/04/24

In the middle of last month, the media were told that a deal had been reached between Celtic and the Ibrox club over the return of away fans to the fixture as of next season; around 2500-3000 will be available for the games apiece; it was hailed as a breakthrough.

In fact, if you read the small print, it was only one up to a point, and there was to be a determination from Celtic as to whether certain of our club’s concerns were being taken seriously before we would proceed to offer them an allocation for our ground and accept one for theirs.

Yesterday, John Kennedy was hit by objects thrown at the Celtic dugout. Now we see footage showing that Matt O’Riley was also targeted. The Ibrox club has been far too lax in protecting our people up until now; nobody should believe them when they talk about the safety of our supporters. It is inconceivable that we would subject our fans to that sort of thing.

Celtic are more than a little concerned at this, and we should be. It is out of control over there. That is not a safe stadium for our team to visit, let alone our fans. Next season’s ticket settlement depends on the safety of the fans; I would not be surprised if we added the safety of our players and staff to the growing list of concerns. This is, after all, not a first offence.

“It has been confirmed today that a glass bottle was thrown at Matt at yesterday’s match. The repeated targeting of our players and staff with missiles is quite appalling and completely unacceptable. We have already raised our serious concerns with Rangers and understand that police are investigating the matter,” said Celtic’s second statement of the weekend.
“Appalling and completely unacceptable.” Those are the words that jump out. But so too is the reference to “serious concerns.” A Celtic staff member was hit on the head with a bottle a couple of years ago. We cannot allow this to become the new normal there.
On 29 March last year, one of their fans, Alan Crawford, was jailed for 12 months for launching the bottle that struck Daniel Friel, our physio. It required four stitches and left a permanent scar. This is what the sherif said at the time;

“This was an attack on a man in the course of his employment. The throwing of a bottle was not only an act of mindless violence but it had significant consequences for the person you injured and will stay with him for the rest of his life. The court must ensure that this grave conduct at events such as this is discouraged and the public protected. A custodial sentence is the only appropriate method to deal with you due to the gravity of the offence and the use of a bottle as a weapon.”

Here is what is astonishing about that incident; Crawford was sitting in the “corporate seats” when he did this. This was one of the upper crust, a guy sitting in the high value seats, a guy who had probably hobnobbed with the top brass.

The case of Lee Findlay is at the other end of the scale; he was 17 when he hit a Celtic fan on the head with a bottle that he found lying on the ground inside the stadium; he picked it up and launched it into our supporters without a second’s thought, and it hit a fan on the head. He escaped a custodial sentence because of his age, but he got a five-year banning order.

The situation at that ground is serious. The impulse that compels both young kids and guys in the rich seats to do these things is the same one. It’s the same one that saw our assistant manager and one of our players targeted yesterday, and these are the incidents which we know about, the ones that are of a high enough profile to get headlines.

If you look at social media, you’ll know that there was severe disorder in the Gallowgate on Saturday night, and a cache of weapons was found in Glasgow Green. This is a Celtic area, filled with our fans, which was attacked by their supporters.

That’s what we’re talking about here, although the media has done its best to dance around that fact and called it an “Old Firm” fight. But that’s not what it was, of course; this was a deliberate attack on a Celtic fan area and people out for a Saturday night drink being forced to defend themselves. Again, this is not an isolated incident.
Celtic will take a long hard look at what Ibrox does about this, if anything. And we will base and future decision to take tickets for that ground – and thus whether to give any for ours – on what the response to this will be. If our fans are to be truly protected then every supporter who enters that ground for one of these games should be searched by police; yes, that will entail fans arriving long before games kick off, but that’s just too bad.

The SPFL should also start sanctioning clubs for this stuff. Ibrox’s previous history with it cannot be ignored, nor is it possible to suggest they are doing everything they can to assure the safety of our coaches and players, or our fans when they attend games there.
It is clear that Ibrox is a manifestly unsafe place for anyone of a Celtic persuasion. They even told a senior broadcast journalist – Chris Sutton – that they could not guarantee his safety there, a quite extraordinary claim and one that should have seen the SPFL step in immediately. But as usual they chose not to bother … and that’s part of why we’re here.

The police are going to have to step up to the plate too here, as they are clearly not performing as they should. Celtic is right to be concerned right across the boards. We cannot accept tickets for that ground, in whatever number, until this stuff is stamped out.
Ffs that lady's front bottom can go on.
 
Ffs that lady's front bottom can go on.
You would think from the moral high ground he’s taken that Celtic have never hit our players with lighters (still trying to identify the one who hit Ricksen and Fernando is sadly no longer with us). He also forgots the multiple mutants who have actually entered the field of play to attack our players and had in one instance to me “restrained” by Bomber to protect his keeper.
 
You would think from the moral high ground he’s taken that Celtic have never hit our players with lighters (still trying to identify the one who hit Ricksen and Fernando is sadly no longer with us). He also forgots the multiple mutants who have actually entered the field of play to attack our players and had in one instance to me “restrained” by Bomber to protect his keeper.

Not to mention Celtic fans throwing a bottle into the face of a 10 year old boy who lost teeth and required stitches. A busload of them know who threw it and nobody said a word. Familiar story over there, is it not?
 
You would think from the moral high ground he’s taken that Celtic have never hit our players with lighters (still trying to identify the one who hit Ricksen and Fernando is sadly no longer with us). He also forgots the multiple mutants who have actually entered the field of play to attack our players and had in one instance to me “restrained” by Bomber to protect his keeper.
Also abusing our black players with monkey gestures and throwing bananas
 
That's just embarrassing
He's either so stupid he believes this or he believes his followers are so stupid they won't figure out the obvious flaw in his post
There are two football grounds in Dundee a couple of hundred yards apart literally on the same street
It's fair to assume the weather at both grounds is the same 99.99999% of the time
One has had five games postponed, the other has none
Stevie Wonder could see that's clear evidence of something being wrong at one of the grounds
If only he had a brain
 
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