Celtic don't need Rangers...
while it may be true that neither side of the Old Firm would be as big as they are now without the other, it is certainly not true that Celtic need Rangers to be a big club.
Celtic were enormously successful from the moment they entered competition - at which time there was no bad blood between them and Rangers. Indeed, it was written in a chronicle in the early 1890s that "the Light Blues are a favorite amongst the Celtic crowd".
it was only when Celtic's success became too great for the establishment to tolerate, that the Glaswegian people, both high up and at grassroots, began looking around for a Protestant club to compete with this Catholic upstart. (it's hard to overestimate how fervent anti-Catholic sentiment was in 19th century Scotland - before Irish immigration, there were more anti-Catholic organizations in Glasgow than there were Catholics themselves!)
the two candidates were Queen's Park and Glasgow Rangers, but since the former doggedly maintained their amatuer status, it was the next most successful club who carried the torch for mainstream Scottish society. and that was the Club's priority for their entire history, right up until the 1980s when it no longer became feasible to remain officially sectarian. but at the grassroots level the culture is the same: those who really love the club, love it because of its opposition of Celtic and all that Celtic stands for. Rangers never had any connection to Ulster, yet fans fly the Unionist Northern Ireland St. George's Cross, give a "red-hand salute" (that they themselves invented) and sing songs about The Sash and the Orangemen etc. even though these things have nothing to do with the club.
so i hope you can see how it is plainly a one-way dependent relationship. Glasgow Rangers would just be another Scottish club (albeit a stronger one, but probably only marginally stronger than say Hearts or Aberdeen pre-1990s) were it not for Celtic. whereas Celtic's culture is one that is 90% pro-Ireland and the Celtic people, and less than 10% anti-British (and perhaps 0.1% anti-Protestant). let me put it this way: if Celtic re-located to Ireland, virtually nothing would change in terms of culture. if Rangers re-located to England, their flying of the Union Flag and singing of Rule Britannia etc would become quite irrelavant, even laughable. worse still, if Rangers stayed in Scotland, without Celtic, they would lose all identity whatsoever, and would simply be a pro-Union team singing their songs to deaf ears (although some other smaller Scottish clubs have taken to singing Flower of Scotland back at the Gers when they sing Rule Britiannia :D )
Re: and for the last time...
Quote:
Originally posted by aussie_tim_1798
and i marvel at the hypocrisy inherent with those who say: "Irish people should support Hibs instead of Celtic", while slagging off Celtic fans for supporting a team that doesn't play in the FAI! it seems to me just a massive case of "tall-poppy syndrome" (i.e., jealousy), all this hostility towards one of the most successful clubs in Northern Europe...
:confused:
Agreed it is ridiculous and disgraceful to expect Irish people to support Hibs or indeed any other British club - they should support Limerick or Shelbourne or Longford or whoever.:rolleyes: