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The club is officially nicknamed the Bhoys, or unofficially the Hoops. Although the full name of the club is '''The Celtic Football Club''', it is often incorrectly called "Glasgow Celtic" (or "Celtic Glasgow"), particularly by English and foreign commentators.
The club is officially nicknamed the Bhoys, or unofficially the Hoops. Although the full name of the club is '''The Celtic Football Club''', it is often incorrectly called "Glasgow Celtic" (or "Celtic Glasgow"), particularly by English and foreign commentators.


Celtic play home games at [[Celtic Park, previously known as Parkhead]], which is currently the second-largest club stadium in the United Kingdom. In 2005/06, Celtic Park attracted an average attendance of 58,150 [http://www.soccer-stats.com/divisions/attendances.asp?divno=5&orderby=7&asid=05], making Celtic second only to [[Manchester United]] [http://www.footballeconomy.com/stats/stats_att_04.htm] in terms of average attendance for any British football club.
Celtic play home games at [[Celtic Park]], which is currently the second-largest club stadium in the United Kingdom. In 2005/06, Celtic Park attracted an average attendance of 58,150 [http://www.soccer-stats.com/divisions/attendances.asp?divno=5&orderby=7&asid=05], making Celtic second only to [[Manchester United]] [http://www.footballeconomy.com/stats/stats_att_04.htm] in terms of average attendance for any British football club.


Together with their rivals, [[Rangers F.C.]], they form the [[Old Firm]] which is one of the most famous and fiercest rivalries in sport. The club has traditionally been identified with the Catholic community of Glasgow. Celtic's home kit is green and white hooped jerseys, white shorts and white socks.
Together with their rivals, [[Rangers F.C.]], they form the [[Old Firm]] which is one of the most famous and fiercest rivalries in sport. The club has traditionally been identified with the Catholic community of Glasgow. Celtic's home kit is green and white hooped jerseys, white shorts and white socks.

Revision as of 22:44, 23 September 2006

Celtic F.C.
File:Celtic FC logo.png
Full nameThe Celtic Football Club
Nickname(s)The: 'Bhoys', 'Hoops', 'Tic'
Founded1888
GroundCeltic Park
Parkhead
Glasgow
Lanarkshire
Capacity60,832
ChairmanScotland Brian Quinn
ManagerScotland Gordon Strachan
LeagueScottish Premier League
2005-2006Scottish Premier League, 1st

Celtic Football Club (pronounced "seltik", /sɛltɪk/ in IPA) AIM: CCP is a Scottish football club, competing in the Scottish Premier League, the highest form of competition in Scotland. The club is based in the east end of the city of Glasgow.

The club is officially nicknamed the Bhoys, or unofficially the Hoops. Although the full name of the club is The Celtic Football Club, it is often incorrectly called "Glasgow Celtic" (or "Celtic Glasgow"), particularly by English and foreign commentators.

Celtic play home games at Celtic Park, which is currently the second-largest club stadium in the United Kingdom. In 2005/06, Celtic Park attracted an average attendance of 58,150 [1], making Celtic second only to Manchester United [2] in terms of average attendance for any British football club.

Together with their rivals, Rangers F.C., they form the Old Firm which is one of the most famous and fiercest rivalries in sport. The club has traditionally been identified with the Catholic community of Glasgow. Celtic's home kit is green and white hooped jerseys, white shorts and white socks.

In 1967, Celtic became the first British team to win the European Cup. Prior to this historic win, no other club in Northern Europe had won the tournament, which had been the preserve of Italian, Portuguese and Spanish clubs. Celtic won every competition that they entered that season: Scottish League, Scottish FA Cup, Scottish League Cup, European Cup and the Glasgow Cup.

Additionally, Celtic remain the only Scottish club ever to have reached the final, and are the only club ever to win the trophy with a team composed entirely of home-grown talent; [3] [4] all of the players in the side were Scottish, and all were born within a 30-mile radius of Celtic Park in Glasgow. Celtic again reached the European Cup final in 1970, only to be beaten by Feyenoord in extra time. In 2003 Martin O'Neill led the team to the UEFA Cup final in Seville where they lost 3-2 to F.C. Porto after extra time. Around 80,000 [5] [6] [7] Celtic supporters travelled to Seville for the final.

Formation

Celtic Football Club was formally constituted at a meeting in St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church hall on East Rose Street (now Forbes Street), Calton, Glasgow, by an Irish Marist monk named Brother Walfrid original from County Sligo on 6 November, 1887.

The charity established by Brother Walfrid was named The Poor Children's Dinner Table. Walfrid's move to establish the club as a means of fund raising was largely inspired by the example of Hibernian F.C. who were formed out of the immigrant Irish population a few years earlier in Edinburgh.

On 28 May, 1888, Celtic played their first official match against Rangers and won 5-2 in what was described as a "friendly encounter". Celtic had 8 'guest' players from Hibernian playing that day.

The Old Firm and sectarianism

The term sectarian refers to a group who belongs to a religious and cultural sect, and display contempt, hatred or dislike of all others, not belonging to their sect.

Celtic have had a historic association with the peoples of Ireland. As a consequence, the club and its supporters have been embroiled in issues surrounding sectarianism. At its worst extreme this sectarianism has manifested itself in sectarian violence; the reproduction of cultural prejudices; and a perceived anti-Celtic bias (see History of Celtic F.C.), which some fans believe to be a part of a wider anti-Catholic bias in Scotland (see Irish-Scots).

In the context of Scottish football, sectarianism is beyond the control of any individual football club. It is a much wider issue, rooted in social, cultural, historical and religious circumstances. Nevertheless, both Celtic and Rangers accept that they have a problem with sectarianism. Both Celtic and Rangers admit that a proportion of their supporters have been, and continue to be, guilty of perpetuating sectarian beliefs and cultural intolerance.

A minority of Celtic fans with Republican sympathies sing IRA songs at games, especially the away support. This is in comparison to a minority of Rangers fans, who are traditionally Loyalist, that sing songs such as Billy Boys. In recent times both clubs have taken measures to combat sectarianism. Working alongside the Scottish Parliament, church groups and community organisations, the Old Firm has clamped down on sectarian songs, inflammatory flag-waving, and troublesome supporters, using increased levels of policing and surveillance. [8] [9] In 1996, for instance, Celtic launched their Bhoys Against Bigotry campaign, later followed by Youth Against Bigotry to "educate the young on having ... respect for all aspects of the community - all races, all colours, all creeds", according to then chief executive Ian McLeod [10].

Celtic and the media

Celtic have always attempted to engage directly with the fans and bypass the traditional media outlets as a method of communicating accurate information to the outside world about the inner workings of the club.

When Jock Stein was Celtic manager, he instigated a trend in British football that subsequently became known as the "tracksuit manager", where he trained publicly with the playing staff and hosted media/press conferences.

In 1965 Celtic began publishing the The Celtic View, the UK's first ever regular football club newspaper.

In 2004 Celtic launched its own digital TV channel Celtic TV available in the UK through Setanta Sports on satellite and cable platforms. Since 2002 Celtic's Internet TV channel, Channel67 (previously known as Celtic Replay), has broadcast Celtic's own content worldwide, offers live match coverage to subscribers outside the UK, and now provides 3 online channels.

Recent seasons

2003-2004

After a draw in the opening game of the season, Celtic notched up a record-setting 25-match winning run, now a British record in top-level football, giving Celtic a healthy lead in the title race. Celtic did not lose a game until after the club's 39th championship was delivered.

The 2003-2004 season also saw Celtic notch up four league wins over Rangers, and one in the Scottish Cup - the first time in either club's history when a five-match "whitewash" had been achieved.

Club hero Henrik Larsson played his final professional match for Celtic in the 2004 Scottish Cup Final victory over Dunfermline, scoring two goals, with Bulgarian Stilian Petrov's goal following Larsson's goals to overturn an early setback, and handing Celtic their second double under Martin O'Neill.

Larsson is now widely acknowledged as one of the club's greatest ever players, and ranks amongst the top three goalscorers in the club's history.

2004-2005

Following a close race for the SPL title, with Rangers closely following, the club extended their lead at the top of the SPL table to two points as they lined up for the final game of the season, with a win at Motherwell F.C. required to seal the title. With two minutes remaining on the clock, Celtic were leading 1 – 0 — a result which would have handed them the league.

However, Motherwell's Scott McDonald netted two last-minute goals giving the Fir Park side an unlikely victory. Rangers defeated Hibernian F.C. 1 – 0 at Easter Road, thereby winning the league championship title. Earlier in the season Celtic recorded a record seventh straight win over city rivals Rangers.

Celtic ended the season one week later with a 1–0 win over Dundee United F.C. in the Scottish Cup Final, which was marked by fans as Martin O'Neill's final match as manager.

On 25 May, 2005, O'Neill announced he would resign as manager of Celtic at the end of 2004/05 season along with first team coach Steve Walford and assistant manager John Robertson. It was widely reported that O'Neill decided to take time out of football in order to care for his ailing wife Geraldine, who is ill with lymphoma.

Martin O'Neill is now recognised as Celtic's most successful manager since Jock Stein, third greatest after Stein and Willie Maley and is credited with helping to restore some pride in Celtic's ability to compete on the European stage. However, O'Neill was not able to emulate Stein's dominance of the game in Scotland and in Europe.

2005-2006

Former Aberdeen F.C. player and Scotland international Gordon Strachan from Edinburgh took charge of the club on 1 June 2005, on a 12-month rolling contract, similar to O'Neill's arrangement with the club; his contract effectively extending for one calendar year from any current date. Garry Pendrey was appointed as Strachan's assistant manager.

In his first competitive match, against Artmedia Bratislava on 27 July, 2005, Celtic lost 5-0 in the first leg of an important Champions League 2nd Round qualifier, suffering the worst European defeat in the club's history and the widest margin of defeat since the 1963-64 season, when the club lost 6-0 to Kilmarnock F.C. at Rugby Park.

In Strachan's first domestic match of the 2005-2006 SPL season, Celtic relinquished a 3-1 half-time lead over Motherwell F.C. at Fir Park on 30 July 2005, the game ending in a 4-4 draw after Celtic managed to equalise through a goal by Craig Beattie.

The nine goals against Celtic in Strachan's first two competitive matches is the biggest goal tally scored against the club in successive matches for 14 years.

In the return leg of the Champions League 2nd Round qualifier against Artmedia at Celtic Park, Strachan's vastly improved side won 4-0 but were eliminated from European competition 5-4 on aggregate.

However, following these setbacks, and a defeat against Rangers in the pair's first match of the season at Ibrox, Celtic recorded a series of victories, including beating Rangers twice, and returned to the top of the SPL - a vast improvement on their form at the start of the season.

Celtic knocked arch rivals Rangers out of the League cup on 19 November 2005. Celtic were knocked out of the Scottish Cup on 8 January 2006 by First Division Clyde F.C.

Celtic beat Rangers again on 12 February to make it 17 wins from the previous 21 Old Firm games. Celtic won the CIS Cup, with a 3-0 win over Dunfermline Athletic F.C. on 19 March. They have already created a new scoring record for the SPL, an 8 - 1 victory against Dunfermline in February 2006.

On 5 April 2006 Celtic clinched their 40th title thanks to a goal from John Hartson in a 1-0 win against Hearts at Celtic Park. The title was Celtic's fourth title in six years. This feat was achieved with six games remaining until the end of the season and before the SPL split. The Bhoys lifted the SPL trophy on Easter Sunday 2006 at home to Hibernian F.C., after a 1-1 draw.

In April 2006, Celtic's reserve and Under-19 teams also won their championships, completing a clean sweep of Scotland's league competitions. It was the fifth consecutive league title for the reserve team. Celtic's reserve team have now won their league 4 years in a row and the Under-19 have won their league 5 years in a row.

2006-2007

Club records

  • The Scottish Cup final win against Aberdeen F.C. in 1938 was attended by a crowd of 146,433 at Hampden Park in Glasgow, which remains a record for a club match in European football.
  • Celtic currently hold the UK record for an unbeaten run in professional football: 62 games (49 won, 13 drawn), from 13 November, 1915 until 21 April, 1917- a total of 17 months and four days in all (they lost at home to Kilmarnock F.C. on the last day of the season). Although this was during the 1st World War years.
  • Celtic also hold the SPL record for an unbeaten run of home matches (77), spanning from 2001 to 2004 (this run was ended by a 2-1 defeat to Aberdeen on 21 April, 2004), and the record for the longest run of consecutive wins in a single season (25 matches).
  • Record victory: 11-0, against Dundee in 1895.
  • Record defeat: 0-8 against Motherwell F.C. in 1937.
  • Record home defeat: 0-5 against Heart of Midlothian F.C. in 1895.
  • Record post war home defeat 1-5 Aberdeen 1948.
  • The four Record European victories 9-0 KPV Kokkola (Finland), 1970. 8-1 Suduva (Lithuania), 2003. 7-0 Waterford (Rep.Ireland), 1970, 7-0 Valur Rekjavik, 1975.
  • Record European defeat: 0-5 against FC Artmedia Bratislava on 27 July, 2005.
  • Record victory against Rangers: 7-1 1957 Scottish league cup final.
  • Record points earned in a season: 72 (Premier Division, 1987/88, 2 points for a Win); 103 (Scottish Premier League, 2001/02, 3 points for a win), which is also the SPL points tally record.
  • Record home attendance: 92,000 against Rangers F.C. in 1938. A 3-0 victory for Celtic.
  • Most capped player: 102, Kenny Dalglish: Scotland
  • Most Scotland caps: 102, Kenny Dalglish.
  • Record appearances: Billy McNeill, 790 from 1957 - 1975.
  • Most goals in a season: Henrik Larsson, 53.
  • Record scorer: Jimmy McGrory, 468 (plus 13 whilst on-loan at Clydebank).
  • First British club to reach the final of the European Cup.
  • First and only Scottish club to reach the final of the European Cup.
  • First Scottish, British and northern European team to win the European Cup.
  • Only club in history to have won the European Cup with a team comprised entirely of home-grown talent (all last four in 1967, in which year Celtic achieved the feat of winning every competition they played in).
  • Hold the record for the highest score in a domestic cup final: Celtic 7 - 1 Rangers, Scottish League Cup Final 1957.
  • Hold the record for the highest attendance for a European club competition match: Celtic v Leeds Utd in the European Cup semi-final 1970 at Hampden Park, Glasgow. Official attendance 133,961.
  • Fastest hat-trick in European Club Football - Mark Burchill v Jeunesse Esch of Luxembourg in 2000.
  • Earliest SPL Championship won. Won with 6 games to go against Kilmarnock on 18 April ,2004 and Hearts on 5 April, 2006.

Major honours

  • European Champions Cup (1): 1967. Runner-up 1970.
  • UEFA Cup Runner-up 2003.
  • Scottish Football League Champions (36): 1893, 1894, 1896, 1898, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1919, 1922, 1926, 1936, 1938, 1954, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1986, 1988, 1998.
  • Scottish Premier League Champions (4): 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006.
  • Scottish Cup (33): 1892, 1899, 1900, 1904, 1907, 1908, 1911, 1912, 1914, 1923, 1925, 1927, 1931, 1933, 1937, 1951, 1954, 1965, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1995, 2001, 2004, 2005.
  • Scottish League Cup (13): 1957, 1958, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1975, 1983, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2006.

Other honours

All time scorers

Top 10 all time goal-scorers (including, League, Scottish Cup, League Cup and European goals):

  1. Jimmy McGrory - 468 (McGrory also holds the record for the most professional career league goals in British football history).
  2. Bobby Lennox - 273
  3. Henrik Larsson - 242
  4. Stevie Chalmers - 231
  5. Jimmy Quinn - 217
  6. Patsy Gallacher - 192
  7. John Hughes - 188
  8. Sandy McMahon - 177
  9. Jimmy McMenemy - 168
  10. Kenny Dalglish - 167

Top 10 League goal-scorers:

  1. Jimmy McGrory- 397
  2. Jimmy Quinn - 187
  3. Patsy Gallacher - 186
  4. Henrik Larsson - 174
  5. Bobby Lennox - 167
  6. Stevie Chalmers - 159
  7. Jimmy McMenemy - 144
  8. Sandy McMahon - 130
  9. Adam McLean - 128
  10. John Hughes - 115

All time appearances

Top 10

  1. Billy McNeill- 790
  2. Paul McStay - 678
  3. Roy Aitken - 669
  4. Danny McGrain - 661
  5. Pat Bonner - 642
  6. Bobby Lennox - 587
  7. Bobby Evans - 548
  8. Jimmy McMenemy - 515
  9. Jimmy Johnstone - 515
  10. Tommy Burns - 504

Managers

Current team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Poland POL Artur Boruc
2 DF Scotland SCO Paul Telfer
3 DF England ENG Lee Naylor
5 DF Scotland SCO Gary Caldwell
6 DF Guinea GUI Bobo Balde
7 FW Poland POL Maciej Żurawski
8 MF England ENG Alan Thompson
9 FW Scotland SCO Kenny Miller
10 FW Netherlands NED Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink
11 MF Scotland SCO Stephen Pearson
12 DF Scotland SCO Mark Wilson
14 FW Scotland SCO Derek Riordan
15 MF Netherlands NED Evander Sno
16 MF Denmark DEN Thomas Gravesen
18 MF Northern Ireland NIR Neil Lennon (captain)
20 MF Czech Republic CZE Jiří Jarošík
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 GK Scotland SCO David Marshall
25 MF Japan JPN Shunsuke Nakamura
29 FW Scotland SCO Shaun Maloney
37 FW Scotland SCO Craig Beattie
38 MF Scotland SCO Rocco Quinn
41 DF Scotland SCO John Kennedy
42 FW Scotland SCO Michael McGlinchey
43 FW Ireland EIR Diarmuid O'Carroll
44 DF Scotland SCO Stephen McManus (vice-captain)
45 MF Scotland SCO James O'Brien
46 MF Ireland EIR Aiden McGeady
47 GK Northern Ireland NIR Michael McGovern
48 DF Ireland EIR Darren O'Dea
49 DF Scotland SCO Scott Cuthbert
51 FW Scotland SCO Nicky Riley
53 MF Scotland SCO Simon Ferry
54 MF Scotland SCO Ryan Conroy

Players out on loan

4 DF Scotland SCO Adam Virgo (on loan to Coventry)
40 MF Scotland SCO Michael Gardyne (on loan to Ross County)
50 DF Scotland SCO Gary Irvine (on loan to Ross County)
55 FW Scotland SCO Paul McGowan (on loan to Morton)
35 MF Scotland SCO Paul Lawson (on loan to St Johnstone)

Transfers

In: Season 2006/07

Out: Season 2006/07

Reserve & Youth squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Scotland SCO Scott Fox
GK Wales WAL Owen Jones (Youth)
GK Ireland EIR Paul Skinner (Youth)
DF Scotland SCO Craig Reid
DF Scotland SCO Ryan McCafferty
DF Scotland SCO Paul Caddis (Youth)
DF Ireland EIR Gary Walsh (Youth)
DF Scotland SCO Dean Richardson (Youth)
DF England ENG Paul Hutchinson (Youth)
DF Ireland EIR Gareth Christie (Youth)
DF Scotland SCO Jason Marr (Youth)
DF Scotland SCO Kevin Ross (Youth)
DF Scotland SCO Andrew Traub (Youth)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Ireland EIR Daniel Lafferty (Youth)
MF Iceland ISL Teddy Bjarnason
MF Scotland SCO Charles Grant
MF Ireland EIR James O'Brien
MF Scotland SCO Ross Hepburn (Youth)
MF Scotland SCO Sean Anderson (Youth)
MF Scotland SCO Mark Millar (Youth)
MF Ireland EIR Paul Cahillane (Youth)
MF Ireland EIR Graham Carey (Youth)
FW Iceland ISL Kjartan Finnbogason
FW Ireland EIR Tim Kiely (Youth)
FW Scotland SCO John McGeogh (Youth)

Non-playing staff

Notable players

       

Greatest ever team

Greatest ever Celtic team

The following team was voted the greatest ever Celtic team by supporters in 2002.


UEFA ranking

Current club ranking

Current National League ranking

See also

External links

Preceded by European Cup Winner
1967
Succeeded by

Template:Fb start

Template:Fb end Template:Champions League 2006-07