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Pat Nevin, the phantom punches and a media meltdown built on fiction

Pat Nevin, the phantom punches and a media meltdown built on fiction

Quick read

Pat Nevin told a national audience Celtic fans punched Lawrence Shankland, but no footage or Police Scotland report has verified it.

  • Nevin said Celtic supporters were "attacking Hearts players" and "two or three" punched Shankland.
  • No video or photograph has emerged showing Shankland punched or Hearts players assaulted.
  • Police Scotland have reported no assaults on Hearts players from the Celtic Park incident.
  • The flashpoint came during Celtic's title celebrations at Celtic Park.
  • Scottish football coverage focused on the pitch invasion for nearly two weeks.

Scottish football has spent the best part of two weeks drowning in outrage over events that, according to the available evidence, simply did not happen.

At the centre of it all sits Pat Nevin’s live commentary during Celtic‘s title celebrations at Celtic Park.

Nevin did not merely express concern. He did not cautiously speculate. He did not wait for facts.

Instead, he told a national audience that Celtic supporters were “attacking Hearts players”, claimed that “two or three have punched” Lawrence Shankland, and described scenes as “absolutely dreadful” and “sickeningly unacceptable.”

Those are not minor observations.

Those are serious allegations.

The problem is that there is no evidence they happened.

Not one video has emerged showing Lawrence Shankland being punched.

Not one photograph has emerged showing Hearts players being assaulted.

Not one piece of footage from the thousands of cameras inside Celtic Park has substantiated the claims.

Most significantly, Police Scotland have not reported any assaults on Hearts players arising from the incident.

So the obvious question is this:

Why was the Scottish football public told that punches had been thrown when there is no evidence that punches were thrown?

That question should not be directed at Celtic supporters.

It should be directed at Pat Nevin and those who broadcast the comments.

Because words matter.

When a respected pundit tells a huge audience that players are being attacked and punched, that narrative immediately takes on a life of its own. Headlines follow. Social media erupts. Rival supporters repeat it as fact. Politicians and commentators weigh in.

The accusation becomes the story.

And when the accusation later collapses under scrutiny, the correction receives a fraction of the attention.

That is how misinformation spreads.

It is also how reputations are damaged.

For days, Celtic supporters were portrayed as violent thugs invading a football pitch to attack opposition players. The reality appears considerably less dramatic than the version presented to audiences in the immediate aftermath.

Nobody is suggesting supporters should have entered the pitch.

Nobody is defending behaviour that puts players, officials or fellow supporters at risk.

But there is a vast difference between condemning a pitch invasion and falsely claiming players were punched.

One is a legitimate criticism.

The other is a potentially defamatory allegation.

So where is the accountability?

If a player falsely accused an official of corruption, there would be consequences.

If a manager publicly made serious allegations without evidence, there would be consequences.

If supporters spread misinformation, they would be condemned.

Why should media figures operate under a different standard?

Was Nevin simply mistaken?

Did he genuinely believe what he was seeing?

Or was this another example of the modern media race to deliver the most dramatic version of events before the facts are known?

Those are fair questions.

Because the consequences were real.

For nearly two weeks, Scottish football coverage became consumed by outrage, moral grandstanding and demands for punishment. Celtic’s title triumph became secondary to a narrative built around allegations that now appear to have no evidential foundation.

And Pat Nevin is hardly the only figure who should be reflecting.

For many Celtic supporters, the issue extends far beyond Pat Nevin. There is a growing belief that Scottish football’s media landscape remains heavily populated by voices whose sympathies are rarely difficult to identify. The list of former players, pundits and commentators perceived to have Rangers leanings sometimes appears so extensive that it is almost as long as the list of creditors left waiting when the old Rangers collapsed. Humorous as the comparison may be, it reflects a genuine frustration about consistency, balance and objectivity in Scottish football coverage. Too often, when controversy surrounds Celtic, conclusions appear to be reached with remarkable speed, while similar incidents elsewhere are afforded a degree of caution and context that seems strangely absent when the champions are involved.

The wider Scottish football media has spent years claiming to be the guardian of standards while repeatedly rushing to judgement whenever Celtic are involved in controversy.

Too often the verdict arrives before the evidence.

Too often sensational claims are amplified without proper scrutiny.

Too often narratives are constructed first and facts are sought later.

The result is exactly what Scottish football witnessed over the past fortnight: hysteria replacing journalism.

The media’s job is not to inflame.

It is not to sensationalise.

It is not to manufacture outrage because outrage drives clicks, views and engagement.

Its job is to establish facts.

In this case, the facts appear to be painfully inconvenient for those who spent days presenting assumptions as certainty.

If there were punches, where is the evidence?

If there were attacks, where are the arrests?

If there were assaults, where is the footage?

These are not difficult questions.

They are the very first questions that should have been asked before a national audience was told that Celtic supporters were attacking players.

Perhaps the biggest lesson from this episode is not about supporters, clubs or title celebrations.

It is about responsibility.

Because when influential voices make dramatic allegations that prove unsubstantiated, the damage is already done.

And if there is to be any credibility left in Scottish football journalism, those responsible should be prepared to answer the same question they so often ask others:

What accountability follows when the story itself turns out to be wrong?

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