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More than a PLC? The neglect that is killing Celtic

Hearts 3–1 Celtic: Another Defeat That Proves the Board’s Neglect Is Killing the Club

THE RESULT THAT SAYS IT ALL

There are defeats — and then there are statements of decline.

Celtic’s 3–1 defeat away to Hearts wasn’t just another bad day at the office. It was a flashing red warning light, another example of a club being run from the top down by people who don’t understand, or worse, don’t care. Nine games into the season, and we’re already eight points adrift. That’s not form — that’s failure. Failure born from a decade of short-termism, underinvestment, and a boardroom that treats football as an inconvenience to its balance sheet. This is Celtic. Eight points behind after nine games isn’t just unacceptable — it’s unthinkable. But when you see how this club has been managed, it’s no surprise at all.

THE ROT STARTED UPSTAIRS

Let’s be clear: this result didn’t start at Tynecastle. It started at the top.

A summer transfer window that will go down as one of the weakest in recent memory. Promises of “quality over quantity” that delivered neither. A statement from the boardroom that insulted supporters’ intelligence. While Brendan Rodgers tries to build a team capable of competing, the PLC works against the football department — trimming ambition, blocking progress, and protecting dividends. How can a club that preaches “world class in everything we do” end up with a squad this unbalanced, this short on leadership, this riddled with players the manager clearly didn’t ask for? The answer lies in one phrase: “club signings.”

We all remember that meeting — when fans asked CEO Michael Nicholson about Rodgers’ comment, and he simply shrugged. That shrug has become the perfect metaphor for this board: detached, directionless, and disrespectful.

A DEFEAT THAT FUELS THE MOVEMENT

If anything good can come from this result, it’s this: it vindicates every warning the Collective and the wider fan base have been shouting for months. The “Not One More Penny” boycott wasn’t born out of hysteria. It was born out of clarity. Fans saw this coming — the decay, the apathy, the lack of football leadership. And today’s result proves them right. The board told us all was fine. The fans said it wasn’t. Now the scoreline at Tynecastle backs the fans, not the executives. So here’s the truth: this defeat doesn’t weaken the movement — it strengthens it. Because every poor performance now echoes the same message — football suffers when greed governs.

CELTIC IS MORE THAN A PLC

Supporters have always been the heartbeat of this club. We’ve carried it through the dark days, rebuilt it from ruins, and filled every stadium from Lisbon to Livingston. But that spirit is being tested by those who treat Celtic like a private portfolio. For too long, this board has hidden behind success built by others, claiming credit while quietly siphoning ambition into shareholder satisfaction. That era has to end. No more false dawns. Excuses no more. No more shrugging at failure.

THE FIGHT CONTINUES

So where do we go from here?

The same place we’ve been heading — towards accountability. Every defeat strengthens the case for reform. Every fan who stops spending strengthens the pressure. The “Not One More Penny” campaign now carries even more moral weight — because the consequences of this board’s neglect are playing out on the pitch. If they won’t act out of pride, they’ll act out of pain — financial, public, and political. That’s what leverage looks like. Celtic’s problems aren’t tactical. They’re structural. And no amount of PR statements or half-hearted signings will hide that truth anymore.

THE MESSAGE FROM THE FANS

To the players: we’ll always back you, to the manager: we see what you’re up against. To the board: your time of hiding behind the crest is over. You can shrug off questions, but you can’t shrug off results. You can write statements, but you can’t rewrite the table. Eight points behind after nine games. A fanbase unified in anger. And a movement that’s only getting louder. “Not One More Penny” isn’t just a slogan now — it’s a reality born of results.

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3 Comments

  • by Steve
    Posted October 27, 2025 9:01 am 0Likes

    Agree with everything mentioned in the article.
    As a fan base we need to stand up together and back the collective.
    It is time for more action though.
    If that includes boycotting games, especially the EL ,then this has to be done or the board will just shrug and take no notice.

    • by Jamie Harvey
      Posted October 27, 2025 12:44 pm 0Likes

      Boycotting games ONLY affects the team on the park. Board couldn’t care less if you don’t turn up for games, they’ve already got most of their money through season tickets. Boycotting merchandise and retail units inside stadium might be better and maybe Addidas will take notice of reduced sales? HH

  • by Che
    Posted October 27, 2025 10:52 am 0Likes

    Corporate greed and asset stripping, enormous bonuses and fat cat pensions they reward their failure and shrug when under scrutiny. Stop giving them your money

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