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Image source, PA Media Image caption, Martin O'Neill led Celtic to the Scottish Premiership title and Scottish Cup last season By Tom English BBC Scotland's chief sports writer Published 19 minutes ago Once Martin O'Neill indicated a desire to carry on as Celtic manager, it would have taken a brave board to say no to the guy who dug them out of the giant hole they had buried themselves in last season. Nobody with any knowledge of O'Neill will have been taken in by his detached grandad routine this past while. He carried on like he's a total bystander in Celtic's double-winning season, like he was an old man who wandered aimlessly into Lennoxtown and was bamboozled by what he saw. O'Neill's schtick is well worn, but nobody has fallen for it. He might be 74, but he is an intelligent mood-setter with a big football brain and a fantastic capacity to connect with footballers and make them feel better and play better. In reappointing him, Celtic might stand accused of short-termism and a lack of ambition. There is no young continental coming in with modern thinking, no impressive firebrand arriving to rip things up and start again, no manager with an extensive grasp on foreign markets and the gems buried within, as was the case with Ange Postecoglou. It seems it all came down to O'Neill and Robbie Keane. That's not a shortlist that screams 'extensive worldwide search'. Giving it to O'Neill again is the easiest option possible. In the wake of the club's colossal, and borderline negligent, error in appointing Wilfried Nancy, ignoring a proven winner who's under your nose is the risk-averse play, the path of least resistance. O'Neill confirmed as Celtic's permanent manager Published 59 minutes ago O'Neill a 'no-brainer' – now major rebuild awaits Published 3 days ago Truth stranger than fiction as O'Neill leads Celtic from hostility to happiness Published 16 May Will O'Neill have received recruitment reassurance? At the end of the season, O'Neill cast doubt on his ability to go back to the coalface one more time, but his words were never convincing. For all his talk of how draining the job is - and that much is beyond dispute - he clearly basks in it. Arguably, the most difficult part of the role was not the on-field stuff at all - he knows more than anybody how to organise and motivate Celtic players and how to engage with Celtic supporters. Dealing with the disconnect between sections of the fans and a deeply unpopular board was, obviously, a strain on him until the run-in, when the whole place finally managed to start pointing in the same direction. The issues that caused the rancour in the first place have not gone away. This is an uneasy truce and it could be broken at any time. O'Neill will know that. He managed his way through all of that, even when his team were putting in dreary performances. They did not lack for spirit, though. They had tons of it and the steel O'Neill instilled was the thing that got them over the line in the Premiership and
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