The Tacitus Tactic
'Right,' said Lawwell, flexing his horse whip. 'In your new role, will you be revealing any details about the tv deal?'
'Of course I will...' replied Doncaster before being rudely
interrupted by a horse whip across the face.
'No you won't. If
asked about the tv deal you will simply say nothing' growled Lawwell.
'But I'll look stupid!' bleated Doncaster.
'Any more stupid than you'll look naked in the centre spot at
Parkhead with my boot still lodged up your arse?'
'I suppose not.'
'Okay. Now if anyone
asks you about sponsorship, what do you say?'
'Nothing, I stand there and look stupid.'
'Good, you're getting it now.'
This was what I heard discussed shortly after Lawwell
interviewed Doncaster for the CEO job at the new SPFL. As usual, I was hiding under a table, unseen,
the victim of a curious set of circumstances I couldn't even begin to explain
right now but fortunately for me, they put me in the right place at the right
time and I was hearing Lawwell brief Doncaster how to approach his first press
conference as the new Chief while Longmuir was still being interviewed by the
Hampden janny in the cleaning cupboard on the ground floor. At one point, Stewart Regan appeared and
asked if there was anything he could do to help but Lawwell punched him right
in the face and sent him howling back to his office. 'That looked like fun,' brightened up
Doncaster. 'Will I be able to do that
now that I'm the boss?'
Lawwell's brows darkened.
'The boss? The fucking boss? Oh for fuck's sake, why do I bother
explaining? Here...' and he reached into
his pocket and pulled out another fist with which he broke Doncaster's nose.
'I'm the fucking boss and don't you bloody forget it,
cock-squeak.' And with that, he stood
up, straightened his jackboots and made to leave but then he paused, looked
around and said, 'And don't think I don't know you're under there, Spiers. I haven't forgotten you breaking into my
house with your pals you know' and then he walked off leaving me shaking under
my table and watching the blood pool from Doncaster's nose congeal on the
floor.
Lawwell was talking about the end of the last season when he
and his team's support lost all sense of perspective and spent more time
ranting about the survival of Rangers than they did celebrating their own SPL
win. I'd invited Lawwell out for a meal
ostensibly to provide him with a Herald platform to attack Rangers one last
time that season just for the fun of it, but I was really working to the
instructions of the Four: those internet guardians of Rangers who have fought
the blue corner more in the past year than Jack Irvine did in God knows how
many years on the Ibrox payroll. I
thought he'd never know I'd betrayed him but it was practically the first thing
he said when we sat down in the Chip restaurant. 'You think you can betray me,
you cunting wimp?' was precisely what he said.
'Eh? What do you
mean? I'm not betraying anyone, what do
you mean, eh?' I gibbered until I felt his hand on my knee under the
table. He squeezed, hard and I could
feel tendons popping and I would've shrieked had I not thought that doing that
would make him squeeze harder - he's a dirty old sadist, is Lawwell, screaming
turns him on. He looked me straight in
the eye and through gritted teeth said, 'You really must think I'm some kind of
moron to trust you, you little whelp.
Have you forgotten already that there are two of me now? Two of all of us who went on that little
jaunt through time and space. Well my
other me is right now springing a trap on your so called Fantastic Four, where
is your other you, eh? Probably down the
Polo Lounge chasing cock, not having a shower, that's for sure. I don't know what kind of excitement packed
finale you thought you were going to find at the end of this season but it
won't be anything at my expense; no, not this year.' As he finished speaking, his hand tip toed up
my thigh and grabbed me by the manhood, right on my helmet and he pulled it
like a Hyndland door bell just as the waitress appeared.
'Ready to order, gentlemen?' she smiled.
'He'll have the succulent lamb,' muttered Lawwell as he
stood up and left.
By the time I got to Schoenhausen, it was all over. Furniture lay overturned on the floor, broken
glass was everywhere and there was blood sprayed over every wall and surface. 'It was a massacre,' I said out loud.
'It certainly was,' said a voice behind me and I turned and
there was Souness, his moustache at ease, a smoking pistol still in his right
hand. 'One down, one to go, eh loser?'
and he winked and looked over my shoulder.
I turned to see what had caught his attention but there was nothing
there and when I looked back he was gone.
I hate it when he does that.
And then I left. The
season was over, a damp squib in more ways than one and on the way home on the
bus I pondered the future, it looked bright: there was golf and tennis on the
horizon and I'm more at home with them than I am with football. Granted, Lawwell hadn't got what he wanted
with league reconstruction but as he said to me once, there's more than one way
to skin Scottish football alive. I
suppose his latest outrage, the wholesale takeover of the SFL by the SPL was
what he meant by that. It's shameful
that not one journalist has passed comment on it but that's testament to the
Celtic fear factor. I take that back,
one journalist did: Bill Leckie but you can hardly call him a journalist and
anyway, he's been pretty quiet since Lawwell stapled his arse cheeks to a wall
and had Peter Kearney dance a naked polka in front of him for twelve hours.
So we look forward to a new season with Regan, Doncaster and
Lawwell still at the helm of Scottish football in a year when Lawwell finally
took care of business: destroyed the SFL, got rid of Longmuir, fiddled while Dunfermline and Hearts burned and laughed when anyone asked if they'd be punished as much as Rangers.
Yes, this was definitely the season that Scottish football destroyed itself and as I pondered this, I recalled an old quote told to me by Tom Devine one night just before he fell into a barrel of port: 'A shocking crime was committed on the unscrupulous initiative of a few individuals, with the blessing of more, and amid the passive acquescence of all.'
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