Originally Posted by Quack
Have been reading Padraig Coyle's Belfast Celtic history, thoroughly good read, very interesting and enjoyable, as well as sobering to realise the extent of the sectarian hatred involved in Belfast sporting life at the time. Lots of interesting nuggets - Tommy Best, the first black player with any Irish team, played for the Celts in the 40s, they were the first Irish team to go to a European tour in 1912 (to Bohemia), Winston Churchill spoke at Celtic Park in 1912 as a campaign in favour of the Home Rule Bill of the time (the BC secretary Bob Barr named one of his sons Winston in response!) - also how soccer was seen as a healthier alternative to the IRB-linked GAA by many Catholic bishops....
Any thoughts/opinions/critiques? Obviously its a little on "the nationalist side", although I don't think its deformed by this as a work of history, I'd be interested to read dissenting (in every sense!) views...