Martin O'Neill has been appointed Celtic manager, but the board's handling has shifted focus to communication and summer recruitment.
- Supporters faced months of uncertainty and silence over the managerial plan.
- O'Neill returns to the dugout as a Celtic legend with a clear grasp of the club's demands.
- Recruitment is now the immediate test, with concerns over late targets and drawn-out deals.
- The board have had time to prepare for a manager, squad improvements and European demands.
- Celtic's board are credited with major success over the past 25 years, but current messaging is limited.
Martin O’Neill’s appointment as Celtic manager should have been a moment of unity, excitement and optimism.
Instead, it has left many supporters asking uncomfortable questions about the people running the club.
The appointment itself is not the issue.
In fact, most Celtic fans will be delighted to see a club legend back in the dugout. O’Neill understands the demands, understands the supporters and understands what success at Celtic looks like.
The concern is how we got here.
For months there was uncertainty. For months there was silence. For months supporters were left wondering what exactly the board’s plan was.
This should have been a triumphant announcement.
Instead, it arrived carrying a sense of relief rather than excitement.
That is entirely down to the board’s handling of the situation.
A club of Celtic’s size should not be stumbling through one of the most important appointments in its modern history. It should not be allowing speculation and uncertainty to dominate the narrative. Most importantly, it should not be leaving supporters completely in the dark.
Communication has become one of the biggest failings of the current regime.
Fans do not expect the board to reveal every detail of negotiations. They do, however, expect transparency, leadership and a sense that there is a coherent plan in place.
Instead, the vacuum created by the board’s silence has only increased anxiety about what comes next.
Because if this process was difficult, what does that mean for recruitment?
That is now the question hanging over Celtic Park.
If agreements with coaches and staff have proven difficult to conclude, despite their understanding of the club and what it represents, what confidence should supporters have that the board can move swiftly and decisively in the transfer market?
The manager is now in place.
The real work starts now.
And that is where many supporters fear history could repeat itself.
Too often Celtic appear to approach transfer windows reactively rather than proactively. Too often targets arrive late. Too often business drags on. Too often supporters are told to be patient before a late scramble attempts to fix problems that should have been addressed weeks earlier.
Martin O’Neill should not be walking into another summer of delay and hesitation.
He should be walking into a recruitment strategy that has been planned for months.
The board have had plenty of time to prepare.
They have known a managerial appointment was required. They have known squad improvements would be necessary. They have known the demands of domestic football and European competition.
There can be no excuses.
Supporters do not want another transfer window defined by panic buying in its closing stages. They do not want another season beginning with obvious weaknesses still unaddressed.
What they want is competence, foresight and leadership.
To be fair, this board deserves credit for the success Celtic have enjoyed over the past twenty-five years. The trophy room tells its own story. Celtic’s dominance of Scottish football did not happen by accident.
But football moves quickly.
Past achievements cannot justify present complacency.
The uncomfortable reality is that the board increasingly looks out of touch with supporter concerns. The communication is poor. The planning often appears reactive. The messaging is virtually non-existent.
Martin O’Neill’s return should have been a celebration.
Instead, it has become a reminder of the questions many supporters have about the leadership of the club.
The appointment was the easy part.
What happens next will determine whether this summer becomes a statement of intent or another lesson in how not to prepare for a season.
Martin O’Neill is here.
Now the board must prove they are ready too.













































