The Celtic midfielder's case is set to be heard at Hampden on
Monday afternoon. The post-Old Firm panty wetting will continue today
when Ryan Christie shoves a jotter down his pants and takes a seat on
Hampden’s naughty step.
Exactly why head-mistress Clare Whyte called him up in the
first place remains a source of considerable resentment inside Parkhead even
though TV footage clearly showed Christie did take his ball-juggling skills to
a whole new level in a quick fumble with Alfredo Morelos. Football fans from around the world
can buy online Celtic Football Tickets to enjoy its stunning performances.
Exactly how Whyte intends to prove that Christie’s slip of
the hand was intentional and carried out with malice is another thing entirely
and it’s more than likely that Celtic’s legal team will drive a horse and
carriage through her case. It wouldn’t be the first time Whyte has been forced
to wind her neck in over such matters.
The lawyers will argue and not without justification that
this was a split-second, reflex action which occurred in the hundred miles an
hour clattering chaos of a Glasgow derby. They will point out also that it
bears little or no relation to the more deliberate and premeditated grope which
saw Hearts striker Steven MacLean hit with a two-game ban for grappling with
Eboue Kouassi’s crown jewels during a league cup semi-final at Murrayfield.
And they will be absolutely right about that too.
All of which makes the basis for Whyte’s intervention all the
more perplexing because, up until this point in the season, the SFA compliance
officer has been keeping a much lower profile than she did upon her appointment
to the hot seat at the start of 2018/19.
It felt for a while like Scotland’s top-flight matches were
being re-referred every Monday morning that Whyte was employing a revolving
door policy to the disciplinary procedures with hearings being held on a
one-in-one-out basis.
Trial by Sports scene became the catchall phrase to cover
this confusion and the almost scattergun approach to selecting which player
ought to be dragged up next and for what offence.
The noise over this issue became so deafening even SFA chief
executive Ian Maxwell felt forced to poke his head out the office door and
issue a statement calling for calm from the other end of the corridor.
Maxwell spoke out shortly after the resumption of hostilities
which followed last January’s shut-down and at a time when Celtic’s top brass was
back channelling the nuclear notion of recruiting ‘neutral’ referees from
outwith our country’s borders. It all became so absurd that Scottish football
could not move for men in tin foil hats.
Let’s not forget, much of this madness was created after a
first touchy-feely moment involving Morelos and Christie at Ibrox at the end of
December when the Colombian helped himself to a handful of the Celt’s shorts.
Almost exactly one year ago today Celtic issued a statement
expressing the club’s ‘surprise’ after it was revealed the SFA had no plans to
go after Morelos, even though it had been argued he could have been sent off
for his part in three separate flashpoints during that one match.
That is all escalated into a full-blown crisis within a few
weeks was no surprise to anyone who has been around the game up here for any
length of time. And the glaring inconsistencies coming out of Whyte’s office
were largely to blame for the foaming-mouthed furore.
It’s almost as if someone chose to have a word in her
shell-like before the start of this campaign and advised against the
reintroduction of this scorched earth disciplinary policy.
So it does seem odd Christie’s brief brush with Morelos’
manhood will today come under the SFA microscope as Whyte has no way of knowing
for sure if the charge will stand up to any kind of scrutiny.
Others on the same sixth floor will be keeping their fingers
crossed that this does not signal a change of direction for 2020.
If Whyte has rediscovered her appetite for conflict then she
may well also be considering asking Morelos around for a chat about the nuances
of South American hand-gestures.
And that’s another conversation which can only end badly. After
all, last April, when the SFA attempted to throw the book at Celtic skipper
Scott Brown for aiming a more traditionally
Scottish salute at the Rangers end of Parkhead it was booted into touch by lawyers and ridiculed by Hoops manager Neil Lennon as a ridiculous, trumped-up charge.
Scottish salute at the Rangers end of Parkhead it was booted into touch by lawyers and ridiculed by Hoops manager Neil Lennon as a ridiculous, trumped-up charge.
Brown stood accused at the time of ‘failing to act in the
best interests of Scottish football’.
Which was ironic in itself given that Whyte only had to look
across the office floor to see all manner of guilty parties where that
particular crime is concerned She has done well of late to keep her nose out of
everyone else’s business. But she’ll be extremely fortunate if Celtic’s legal
team don’t give her another bloody one today.
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