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Celtic.Ange.Postecoglou.Interview.062022.ENG.twb22.mp4
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The Greek born and Australian raised Ange Postecoglou arrived at a very demoralised Celtic when he first started. Celtic had been distraught in the past covid impacted season (2020/21) ending up empty handed after having dominated the league for the previous nine seasons completing a record quadruple treble.
Celtic had collapsed badly in Europe, lost both domestic cups (no finals), numerous failed transfers & loans, youth players leaving fast, finished far behind in the league title race and ended with no victories v league title winners Sevco. The squad was on its knees with key players leaving little confidence in what was left. The fallout at Celtic saw calls for big changes from the exasperated support, and a new chief exec and director of football were starting alongside Ange at the start of the new season. They all had a major task in front of them. Ange had cut his teeth in the unfancied Australian and Japanese leagues as well as the Aussie national side, and made a major name for himself. He was to be sought after by various clubs, albeit not by the mega clubs. Celtic was a major new challenge but there was confidence in him although a very different proposition to his previous clubs.
Ange is the first Australian (born & raised) to manage a major club in Europe, with non-Europeans previously often overlooked. He is the second manager Celtic have employed from the Japanese leagues, Wim Jansen being the first. In truth, due to the general paucity of the genuine candidates available for the managerial role, Eddie Howe was the top pick and as good as Celtic could aim for, but Celtic lost out after an unnecessarily long protracted process. That is admittedly why Celtic ended up moving for Ange Postecoglou very late on in May/June 2021. More established names were out of Celtic’s budget range. It can’t be denied that this was an appointment met with a lot of criticism initially from sections of the Celtic support. Some critics saw parallels to that of Ronnie Deila, but looking at their records, Ange had far more to support his case, and fans did very quickly warm to Ange the more they read up on him, with plenty of positive reports coming out from Japan & Australia. His best days as a manager to date were solely in Australia and Japan, and so he had a lot to prove to himself as much as all others. Some Australian commentators even remarked that any success could open doors finally to other coaches from his homeland.
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