Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk | OneFootball

Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: The Celtic Star

The Celtic Star

·29. September 2025

Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

On Friday afternoon, at the Lennoxtown media conference, The Celtic Star raised three questions with Brendan Rodgers. They weren’t sensationalist and they weren’t new, but they went straight to the heart of Celtic’s current unrest, communication from the board, the club’s readiness for the January transfer window, and the future of the manager’s contract.

Hours later, on This is ACSOM, former Celtic director Willie Haughey echoed those very same themes.


OneFootball Videos


Recorded before the press conference but broadcast afterwards, Haughey spoke plainly about the need to repair the relationship between board and support. Better communication, a firm commitment to Rodgers, and a smarter approach to transfer business, he argued, are key to bridging the growing gap.

According to Haughey, the questions from The Celtic Star, and the responses from the manager, the solution is staring the board in the face.

Hours later, on This is ACSOM, former director Willie Haughey echoed those very same themes. Recorded before the press conference but broadcast afterwards, Haughey spoke plainly about the need to repair the relationship between board and support. Better communication, a firm commitment to Rodgers, and a smarter approach to transfer business, he argued, are key to bridging the growing gap.

According to Willie Haughey, the questions from The Celtic Star, and the responses from the manager, the solution is staring the Celtic board in the face…

Celtic chief executive Michael Nicholson has already admitted to supporter groups that he wants to improve communication, even, bizarrely, communicating his keeping a yellow post-it note on his office wall to remind him of the promise. Yet, for all the notes and apparent good intentions, the silence, it seems, from the club remains resolute.

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic Chief Executive Michael Nicholson sits in the directors box with Celtic’s Chief Financial Officer Christopher McKay to his right and Willie Haughey behind. Celtic v Hibernian, Scottish Premiership, Celtic Park, 27 September 2025. Photo Stuart Wallace IMAGO Shutterstock

Brendan Rodgers, still the only Celtic employee sent out to face the music, has repeatedly stressed the importance of clarity from the top. Haughey, who sat right behind Michael Nicholson at the game on Saturday, now says the same. Supporters’ associations and the Celtic Fans Collective have been making the case for weeks. The pattern then could not be more consistent or clearer, but still the boardroom remains stubbornly quiet.

That vacuum has allowed rumour to set the agenda. Whispers about chairman’s possible retirement circulate without challenge. Accusations of leaks to the press and speculation about who benefits from them grow legs with every passing day. Conspiracy theories about radio panelists with inside lines thrive in the absence of hard facts. None of these stories may be true, but when the club does not speak, gossip fills the void.

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Your Silence is Deafening banner in the North Curve. Celtic v Hibernian, Scottish Premiership, Celtic Park, 27 September 2025. Photo Stuart Wallace IMAGO Shutterstock

It should be noted silence is not harmless. A jittery support creates a jittery stadium, and a jittery stadium could in time unsettle players. With a crucial European tie against Sporting Braga on the horizon and a January transfer window that could define the season, Celtic cannot afford ongoing self-inflicted distractions that can be easily addressed.

If, as reported, new PR advisers have been engaged, their first lecture should be the most basic one of all, the problem is not that the fans misunderstand the message, it is that the message has been rejected.

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic Chief Executive Michael Nicholson sits in the directors box with Celtic s Chief Financial Officer Christopher McKay to his right. Celtic v Hibernian, Scottish Premiership, Celtic Park, 27 September 2025. Photo: Stuart Wallace. IMAGO/Shutterstock

Supporters are not demanding trade secrets or detailed transfer blueprints. They are asking for reassurance about ongoing communication, direction, ambition and governance. A single press conference or a structured Q&A could calm the waters and help begin to repair lost trust, or at the very least open communication channels. This is not about ceding control, it is about showing respect and recognising that the lifeblood of Celtic is not a balance sheet or a stock price but instead the supporters who fill the stands and fund the future.

The board really should resist the temptation to believe that their genius is merely misunderstood. It is not. The supporters understand perfectly well what their silence means, that they are not hearing the fans.

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic Manager Brendan Rodgers applauds the Celtic fans at full-time. Final score Celtic 0 Hibernian 0. Scottish Premiership, Celtic Park, 27 September 2025 Photo Stuart Wallace IMAGO/Shutterstock

Brendan Rodgers has given them the blueprint, Willie Haughey has reinforced it and The Celtic Star has put it on record. The only question left is whether Michael Nicholson and his colleagues will act.

By now surely the PR team brought into, well, advise the PR team, will have highlighted to the hierarchy that communication is not weakness. It is leadership. And genuine leadership, right now, is the only thing standing between Celtic and a full-blown disconnect.

Time is of the essence, and it is time to talk.

Niall J

Continues on the next page…

Danny McGrain, David Potter & Willie Fernie – what a combination!

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic in the Eighties by David Potter. Out now, order your copy at Celticstarbooks.com

We’re certainly Putting on the Style with the new promotion from Celtic Star Books. David Potter’s final book – Celtic in the Eighties – has been selling wonderfully well since its launch earlier this month. It is by far our fastest-ever seller. Order one of the last remaining copies of Celtic in the Eighties and Danny McGrain will sign it for you PLUS you’ll receive a copy of David Potter’s wonderful book on Willie Fernie as a free gift.

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic in the Eighties and Willie Fernie – Putting on the Style both by David Potter. Photo The Celtic Star

Danny McGrain has now agreed to sign the final batch of Celtic in the Eighties. Ordering is simple, just place your order for Celtic in the Eighties at celticstarbooks.com/shop and we’ll do the rest, ensuring your copy is signed by Danny and a complimentary Willie Fernie book dispatched by the next working day, whilst stocks last, from Wednesday of this week (Danny is signing the books on Tuesday evening).

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Celtic 3-0 St Mirren, Scottish Premier League, Celtic Park, 15 May 1982.Celtic captain Danny McGrain collects the championship trophy as Roy Aitken looks on. Photo The Celtic Wiki

Artikelbild:Your Silence Really is Deafening, Michael – It’s Time to Talk

Danny McGrain signing copies of Celtic in the Eighties by David Potter. Photo: Celtic Star Books

Please note that stocks are now running very low indeed and the book will NOT be reprinted. Click on the image below to order. Please note that postage will only be charged on ONE book.

Celtic in the Eighties by David Potter. Out now on Celtic Star Books. Click on image above to order.

More Stories / Latest News

Impressum des Publishers ansehen