Excellent performance from the lads, from the first throw we were at it💪
Some great scores and excellent defending, onwards to semi final next weekend ❤️🖤
"30 women were murdered… not one road was closed, not one protest. What was the connection? They were murdered by white locals."
Belfast resident Mark gives @BenKentish a stark picture of the riots unfolding in his city.
Congratulations to @KatieTaylor on a Dream come true for her.
NO ONE Deserves this more!
She has opened doors for all of us that Only a True legend could have done.
I am Thankful & Grateful to have shared 3 Fights, 30 rds & the Biggest Purses in Boxing History with her in side the biggest Venues.
Katie you’re once in a Lifetime Athlete
Thank you for representing us women like you have 🙏❤️
When Artur Boruc was at Celtic, there was one thing players were told not to do after an Old Firm game.
Do not go into Glasgow city centre.
It did not matter if you had won, lost, played well, played badly, or just wanted something to eat.
Celtic against Rangers was different, and once the game was over, the sensible thing was to get yourself away from it.
Boruc did not really work like that.
“He was a f****** maniac.”
In one of Boruc’s first Old Firm games for Celtic.
They had played Rangers at home, and once the match finished, the trouble around Glasgow had already started.
Boruc finished the game, got showered, got changed, and walked into town.
By that point, somebody had seen where he was going and phoned security.
“There’s f****** 300 fans ready to kill Artur Boruc.”
So someone had to go and find him before he got there.
They caught up with him and asked him what he was doing.
Boruc could not understand the fuss.
“It’s normal.”
“If they want to fight, I’ll just fight them.”
He genuinely seemed to think this was a reasonable solution.
And with Boruc, it was not even completely out of character.
Another time at Ibrox, Celtic won a tight game.
Boruc went over to the Celtic end, took an Irish flag from the crowd, walked back out, and planted it in the centre circle.
“He was never aware of anything around him.”
“He just didn’t care.”
That was why the Celtic fans loved him.
He was a brilliant goalkeeper, but he also had this way of acting like the most hostile place in Scottish football was just somewhere he happened to be standing.
The police had already cautioned him in 2006 for making a V sign at Rangers fans before a game.
In 2008, after another Old Firm derby, he held up a shirt that said:
“God bless the Pope.”
And after Celtic had won the league in 2007, he waved a champions flag in front of the Ibrox crowd.
When Boruc was asked about that one afterwards, he did not make it complicated.
“It was simple.”
“I was just celebrating that we are the champions.”
“I don’t see anything weird with this.”
That was Artur Boruc at Celtic.
#football #celtic
@truefergallynch Make a day off it, have a walk round the city walls!
Take a tour off the bog side, Derry is a fantastic city.
I’m travelling to Longford for a 6pm throw on sat, it doesn’t matter time or day no game suits everyone.
Go to game and cheer on your boys 💪
One of the most horrific scenes in human history has been revealed.
A video shows people trying to rescue an injured person and carry him to the hospital; Israel bombed them all and killed them with a missile.
A video the world must never forget.
▶️ Take a look at the VAR check that saw Celtic awarded a late penalty at Motherwell for handball.
At 6pm on @SkyFootball watch Scottish Football VAR Review to hear what the SFA's head of refereeing Willie Collum made of it 📺
‘I’ve got a heart… what’s happening is awful’
‘It shouldn’t have landed on 22 year old lads, it shouldn’t be on our toes’
Seamus Coleman on the potential of Ireland playing Israel in the middle of the conflict with Palestine.