1988-01-02: Celtic 2-0 Rangers, Premier League

Match Pictures | Matches: 19871988 | 1987-88 Pictures

Trivia

  • Celtic’s first game of the club’s centenary year (calendar).
  • The result that many cite as the one that landed Celtic  the league advantage and ultimately the title.
  • “Happy Birthday Dear Celtic” was the chant as Celtic won the game.
  • Chris Morris is married on January 3rd.
  • Small number of Celtic fans rightly condemned for throwing bananas at Rangers’ black winger, Mark Walters. The abuse was unwarranted & unacceptable, but led to soul searching amongst the support and there was action taken. Nobody should have taken the type of abuse that Mark Walters was given due to his colour/race/religion etc.
  • Related Article: African Descent Players & Celtic

Review1988-01-03: Celtic 2-0 Rangers, Premier League - Ticket

As much as we should be celebrating here a key victory over Rangers in this game, the truth is that the whole match has been overshadowed by what was a disgraceful set of behaviour by a small section of Celtic fans who embarrassed the entire support. Mark Walters had just joined Rangers, and was the first black player in Scotland for generations. Sadly a section of the Celtic support were bigotted & ignorant and took this as an excuse to give racist abuse to Walters and threw some bananas at him. It goes without saying this was a disgrace and antithesis to all that Celtic stands for.

Celtic player Paul Wilson in the 1970s took pelters from Rangers et al for his dark skin, and Celtic players have throughout had anti-Irish racist slurs chanted at them, but two wrongs don’t make a right.

Thankfully there was a swift backlash from the majority of the Celtic support, and it wasn’t swept under the carpet. Action was taken and there is pride to take at the turnaround by the Celtic support, but this is an example that must be noted to all that not everyone is ‘whiter than white’ (no pun intended) and respect comes not from a tag but from our actions.

Celtic is a special club and Mark Walters et al deserve better.

There maybe many reasons to barrack an opposition player, but his skin colour or ethnicity is NOT one of them.

BBC (2018):

Walters’ first match in Rangers colours, at Celtic Park on 2 January 1988, was marred by vile racism from the home support, with bananas and other assorted fruit items thrown onto the pitch as supporters made monkey noises and gestures any time he collected a pass or ran down the wing with the ball.
Rangers banned one of their own fans following similar behaviour at Ibrox during Walters’ first home game against Morton, but it wasn’t until an away match against Hearts at Tynecastle on 16 January that the disgraceful behaviour hit the headlines.

On the football side, a major key victory on the way to the league & cup double in our centenary season with McAvennie again the hero with a double.

Teams

Celtic (4-3-3);
McKnight; Morris, Baillie, Whyte, Rogan; Aitken, McStay, Stark; Miller, McAvennie, Walker.
Goals: McAvennie (44min) 1-0; (82min) 2-0.

Rangers (4-4-2):
Woods (sub: McGregor 82min); Nisbet, Roberts, Gough, Munro; Cooper (sub: Francis 28min), Wilkins, Souness, Walters; McCoist, Durant.

Referee: A Ferguson (Giffnock).
Att: 60,800

Articles

  • Match Report (see below)

Pictures

Quotes

“When I put the second one in, the whole stadium erupted and the crowd began singing “Happy Birthday Dear Celtic”. Anyone who didn’t know it was a special year, they would know then. It was all as if it was meant.”
Frank McAvennie on the match

Articles

Sunday Times, The (London, England)
January 3, 1988
Author: BOB FERRIER

Celtic ………. 2 Rangers ……… 0

CELTIC’S well-merited win, before a huge, chanting crowd of 60,800, puts them squarely in command of the Scottish Championship, with a seven-point lead over Rangers, although the reigning champions have a game in hand.

The traditional New Year’s match between these arch rivals never reached high levels of skill. It seldom does, in fact, caught up as it is with torrents of passion and, indeed, hate spilling from packed terraces, which had Billy McNeill, the Celtic manager, writing rather lyrically in the programme that the ‘social circumstances which have trapped both clubs in Glasgow’s destiny comes to the boil’ on such occasions.

This time the players and the crowd spurned the insanities of the past and the match was won by goals quite brilliantly taken by McAvennie.

Celtic made a sparkling opening to the match, which began their centenary year, threatening to over-run Rangers, who seemed the more afflicted by nerves. Their early control and passing was below standard even from experienced players like Souness and Wilkins, but with half an hour gone, Rangers were tightening, quickening and getting back into the match.

But a few minutes before half-time, Celtic scored a lethal goal. McStay hit a stunning cross-pass through the defence to the right wing. Morris’s run and first-time low cross were perfection. McAvennie volleyed a quite shimmering goal.

Much of the onfield play held a strange neutrality, and Rangers had a strange shape to them, McCoist, their leading scorer, being left to battle alone against the Celtic defence. McAvennie’s second, the clinching goal, was headed brilliantly past Roberts, who replaced Woods in the Rangers goal some eight minutes from the end following Woods’s collision with the Celtic defender Baillie. Woods went to hospital with suspected broken ribs, which could keep him out of the side for six weeks.

The match result will give Rangers much to ponder. If they were the team of 1987, they ar not the team of this moment, in spite a spate of extraordinary purchases. The latest of these, Walters from Aston Villa, made little impression on the match. Neither, strangely, did Souness, in what may well be his final playing season.

He clearly has a vision of Rangers as a dominant club not only in Scotland but in Europe. In buying players, he has become as acquisitive as a Robert Maxwell, and as manager has taken an autocratic grip of a club that had known no championship success in almost a decade until his arrival.

Souness has a hard task in maintaining Rangers at such a level. Yet he has history to help; a Pounds 10m stadium almost fully paid off; a pools organisation which gives the club more than Pounds 1m a year; and a vast following.

If you can’t buy success, you can buy good players, the basis of success. That seems to be the Souness creed. With a score of matches still to be played, all is far from lost – and Aberdeen and Hearts still have plenty to say. One major problem for Souness will be digesting all these players he has bought and getting them into some kind of consistent playing pattern.

Weather: overcast. Ground: perfect.

Goals: McAvennie (44min) 1-0; (82min) 2-0.

Celtic (4-3-3); McKnight; Morris, Baillie, Whyte, Rogan; Aitken, McStay, Stark; Miller, McAvennie, Walker.

Rangers (4-4-2): Woods (sub: McGregor 82min); Nisbet, Roberts, Gough, Munro; Cooper (sub: Francis 28min), Wilkins, Souness, Walters; McCoist, Durant.

Referee: A Ferguson (Giffnock).

Att: 60,800

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1988-01-02: Celtic 2-0 Rangers, Premier League - The Celtic Wiki2-0 New Years day 88

Evening Times 4th January 1988

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Glasgow Herald 4th January 1988

1988-01-04 GH

A black day for Scots football

Published: 19:10
Updated: 21:00 Saturday 29 December 2007
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https://www.scotsman.com/sport/a-black-day-for-scots-football-1-1430353Bananas greeted Mark Walters on his Rangers debut at Parkhead 20 years ago

MEMORIES do not always marry with the moments they capture. When it comes to Mark Walters and his Rangers debut in the Old Firm derby exactly 20 years ago this Wednesday, that may be deliberate.

“It was a good day for me; a special one,” recalls Walters, who signed for the Ibrox club from Aston Villa in a 1.3m deal on New Year’s Eve 1987. “It was a great experience to play my first game for one of the biggest clubs in the world in front of 50,000 at Parkhead – the largest crowd I’d known since earning a schoolboy cap for England. I have shut out anything other than the positives of that day, because it was so exciting to make a fresh start at 23, after two years when my career was on the slide.”

On January 2, 1988 Walters became the first black player to turn out for Rangers. The abuse he was subjected to that day, and at Tynecastle two weeks later, ended any foolish notion that, while Scottish football was blighted by religious bigotry, it was at least immune to the vile expressions of racial intolerance then infecting the English game. Whenever Walters’ name is mentioned in this county these two afternoons are seared in the mind. They have come to define the winger’s three-and-a-half years north of the Border; more than his artistry, more than a stash of medals or a goals to games average of one-in-three during his 100 matches.

“People ask me how on earth I could get through that first game and enjoy it,” says the player, who made little impression that day as Rangers were beaten 2-0. “To be honest with you, being abused wasn’t that much of a rarity in Britain at that time, even if it was more than I was used to.

“I am single-minded. I was brought up by my family to see every experience as to be welcomed because you can always learn from it what you need to be better for it.”

Scottish football did not demonstrate such insight – either in terms of the authorities or the media. Clips on YouTube make plain the grim extent of the monkey noises and banana throwing Walters’ presence at Celtic Park prompted. Yet, though Celtic slammed the perpetrators, the Scottish Football Association remained silent. And oddly, in the press over the days that followed, there was scant acknowledgement of a virulent new strain of racism at football in this country.

It was just viewed as another manifestation of the contrariness that Old Firm hatred spews forth. “Only a handful of fans hurled fruit,” said a comment piece in the Sunday Mail. The match reports in The Scotsman and the Glasgow Herald made no reference to the treatment received by Walters. Indeed, the most vociferous condemnation of those who indulged in racist behaviour came in the form of letters printed in Celtic’s own newspaper that week.

It wasn’t simply in the written press that the issue was skirted around. Archie Macpherson, in his commentary for the BBC, was forced to explain a stoppage to clear bananas from the Celtic Park pitch. He did so by stating, matter-of-factly: “The game has been slightly held up… some assortment of fruit has been removed… you can see it in front of the Jungle.”

Two weeks later, Rangers faced Hearts at Tynecastle and Walters was struck by a banana and was met with what the Glasgow Herald described as “deluge of fruit” (contrasting with the “mild outburst of fruit throwing” a fortnight earlier). On television that evening Macpherson famously held up a banana and stated what he had witnessed “made him ashamed to be Scottish”.

Macpherson puts down the difference in tone to the obsession with picking away at the sectarianism woven into the fabric of the Old Firm rivalry. Throughout his long career, at least he is one of the few who can claim to have an admirable record on denuding those who would clothe themselves in such tawdry dress.

“There is a conditioning process with these derbies,” he says. “We would listen out for sectarian chanting, scan for any disturbances in the crowd and consider the possible implications for public order if there were any violent incidents on the field. Racial taunting didn’t enter my head as a contentious issue. I had been brainwashed by the religious divisions. I do not say this as an excuse for failing to acknowledge the infamous nature of banana-throwing but merely as explanation.

“On reflection, I should have been more vocal about it, as I have always been vocal about the other evil aspects that have attached themselves to this fixture. I, wrongly, saw the banana-throwing as in essence puerile; an insipid form of the Celtic support’s capacity for a wind-up, at which they are the best in the business. If more had been made of Walters’ treatment at Celtic Park, he might not have had to put up with so much at Tynecastle.”

It is the very collision of sectarianism and racism that probably left the SFA and the media in a quandary over how to react to the abuse suffered by Walters. The governing body could hardly punish a club for their fans’ racist actions when they had never dared bring followers of any side to book for any bigoted behaviour. Equally, how could the issue be highlighted in print without similar weight being given to the fact that, then, Rangers were still 18 months away from a first high-profile Catholic signing in the modern era?

To this day, predictably, there remain pathetic attempts to point-score among the followers of the Glasgow clubs over how much baiting Walters received. Gerry Britton was on the ground staff at Celtic back in 1988. Now manager of Stranraer and a leading figure in the Scottish Professional Football Association – work that involves schools’ education programmes on sectarianism and racism – his testimony cannot be disputed.

“It was one of the very few days I fell out with fans of the club I grew up loving,” Britton says. “It was bad enough having to hear it, and hearing that a fruit shop near the ground sold out of bananas, but it was truly sickening when our job the day after the game was to clear them away. There were dozens of them, scattered everywhere.”

The mood in the country changed following Walters’ treatment at Tynecastle, which came after he had made incident-free appearances against Dundee and Morton. SFA president David Will said all would be done to stamp out racism with the hope that “sensible supporters will let the minority know they shouldn’t be so stupid in the future”.

Hearts chairman Wallace Mercer condemned the banana-throwing as “intolerable social behaviour” and that his club “must be seen to take a stand against racism”. Rangers also spoke out, operations executive Alistair Hood demanding the SFA act to “cease” “this kind of despicable behaviour”.

“Mark Walters was struck by a banana and no matter how you look at it, this is missile throwing,” Hood said.

In forcing Scotland to confront latent racial prejudices 20 years ago, Walters made life at least a little easier for the black players who followed him within these borders. Yet, the treatment meted out to Celtic’s Paul Elliott only 18 months later, and the fact that since the turn of this century racist abuse directed towards Hamilton’s Brian McPhee, Celtic pair Bobo Balde and Momo Sylla and Rangers’ Marvin Andrews has resulted in court cases, suggests as a nation we are not as mature as we would like to believe. As does what happened to Paul Omoniyi, taunted with monkey chants while playing for West Park United under-11s in Dunoon in October 2005 – a case highlighted by this newspaper.

“I am not so shallow as to believe I made a real difference,” Walters says. “If it hadn’t been me it would have been someone else. If I made one person realise it is wrong to abuse a person because of the colour of their skin, that is something. But football reflects society. Prejudice is based on ignorance and many of those guilty of it have probably become educated because we live in a more ethnically diverse country. As well as that, there are laws now in place and CCTV cameras at all grounds. That means supporters just can’t get away with the same abuse and behave at games as they might have done years ago. People might still say and do things in private, but in public…”

It is depressing to think that enforcement as much as enlightenment might account for Walters being the only black footballer in this country to have had bananas thrown at them.

Incidents of racism still blight game

THE Scottish game has moved on since the racist baiting of Mark Walters 20 years ago. Not least because, while the winger was then the only black player in the Premier Division, now more than half the clubs in the country’s top flight have non-white players. However, dealing with isolated cases of racism still appears to prove problematic for the authorities.

The SPL’s introduction of a charter this season setting out a range of punitive measures for unacceptable behaviour by supporters could prove a major step forward. Meanwhile, inertia has tended to envelop the Scottish Football Association when dealing with racist incidents. The SFA’s belief that racist incidents at football grounds should not bring sanctions against the clubs is out of step with UEFA policy and provides no real deterrent.

The Scottish Youth Football Association might have been expected to take the lead when Paul Omoniyi was subjected to monkey chants while playing for Bishopbriggs under-13 side West Park United in Dunoon in October 2005. Following a Scotland On Sunday investigation in June, the SYFA agreed to review a case that drifted into limbo after the Strathclyde Youth Club Association passed the matter over to their governing body in deeming a first racial abuse complaint “too serious” to rule on without the guidance of the SYFA.

The case appeared straightforward. Match referee Ian Cunning, in his report, identified those making the monkey noises as members of the Dunoon under-14s side, while West Park coach Martin Rafferty and the Omoniyi family asked only that some form of written communication be circulated to all youth clubs that acknowledged the wrong that had taken place and warned of future punishment. Calls for such measures were backed by SFA chief executive Gordon Smith, MSPs and racial equality campaigners.

But for 20 months Rafferty has found himself batted back and forth between the SYCA and SYFA.


NTV Issue 4
NTV Issue 4