Emdad
Rahman: Smiler
Mochan is a Celtic legend who’s name doesn’t entirely crop
up as much as it needs to but I
have seen his hanging portrait at Celtic Park.
Celtic
Football Club is quite
simply
the stuff dreams
are made of.
Started off to help impoverished and starving children in Glasgow
this club has gone on to become one of the world’s great football
institutions. Celtic players are symbolic
and there achievements are part of the rich tapestry of this
legendary club. Not many
servants
in the clubs history can boast the pedigree of the late Neilly Mochan
and the launch and release of a new book and documentary has bought
this stalwarts name and achievements right back to the fore.
The
art of Duncan Mattocks greets you with a striking portrait of the
subject
on the front cover. As an avid follower of Scottish football I
decided to delve a little deeper and made contact with Paul John
Dykes - Author of Celtic’s Smiler, a fascinating biography of the
life of one
of the greatest players to have worn a Celtic shirt.
'Smiler’ is simply
an
exploration into the life
of the amazing
Neilly Mochan and his 40-year Celtic Park love affair.
Mochan,
who's
parents escaped Donegal - amongst the most impoverished of areas
during the Irish potato famine, has
a vastly
underrated
status within
the
ranks of
who's who at Glasgow Celtic.
He
doesn’t make the all time Celtic legends lists and it is a wonder
why considering his achievements with the Glasgow giants.
Having
researched the great man one of the first questions to Dyke was about
Mochan’s worth in the modern game. He said:
"A figure like Neilly Mochan would be priceless in the modern
game. Not in respect of his monetary value as a player but for the
fact that he instilled so much in the players around him. He looked
after young ground staff boys like George Connelly, Brian McLaughlin,
Tommy Burns, Charlie Nicholas and Peter Grant and guided them through
their early years as footballers. They all respected Neilly and owed
a lot of their successes to him.”
Having
made his name at Morton, the Carron Cannonball joined the Bhoys after
a short stint in the north east of England after English legend David
Jack took a shine to the Scots star and lured him to Middlesbrough.
Over five glorious decades Smiler scored over 100 goals for the
Bhoys, which
assure
him
a place amongst the honour roll of the Hoops greatest players.
He
was also part of Jock Stein's backroom staff and alongside
Jock Stein and Sean Fallon, Mochan trained the never to be forgotten
Lisbon Lions.
A
the age of 23, Neilly was already known as “Smiler.” It was an
affectionate moniker. He was a deceptive striker and his first hat
trick for his beloved Celtic was
scored in front of 50,000 home fans. It was the first of many goals
scored by Neilly Mochan in the hoops at Celtic Park, an occurrence
that was often compared to the effects of a ring carronade cannon.
During
the 50’s Mochan
scored the winner in the Coronation Cup Final, won the double in
1953/54 and hammered an unforgettable brace in the unforgettable
“Hampden in
the sun" 7-1 annihilation of Glasgow Rangers. Smiler made the
Scotland squad for the World Cup finals in Switzerland in 1954. He
gave unstinted and distinguished service to Scottish football. Mochan
was a friend to all. The great Bobby Lennox described him as “a
'buffer,'
the cement between the players and management.” Dykes writes:
"Mochan’s tale is Odyssean in its scale. His journey as rich
as the passage of time itself, he would go on to become a fabled
pioneer of the Scottish game, a progenitor of European trailblazing
success, and an undisputed patriarch of Celtic Football Club."
After
retiring from playing the game Mochan became a loyal assistant to
Jock Stein, under whom he was Celtic’s first-team trainer
throughout the nine-in-a-row era when the club was feared throughout
the continent, winning their most glittering prize in 1967 on an
unforgettable afternoon in Lisbon. Neilly’s successes continued
into the 1970s, when ten men won the league in 1979, and into the
’80s, when Celtic captured the 100th Scottish Cup Final in
typically cavalier fashion. The following season, he watched from the
dugout as Celtic clinched a last-day title win at Love Street, and
was again on hand for the club’s emphatic League and Scottish Cup
double in its centenary year of 1988. Mochan witnessed the dour 90’s
and the Fergus McCann takeover. He saw it all until his passing in
1994.
With
four
decades
service and 50 winners medals in his kitbag, the Mochan legacy is an
indelible part of Celtic folk memory. This
book and
documentary is
the unrivalled story of the man whom team-mates, reporters, opponents
and fans alike affectionately
referred to as ‘Smiler’.
Mochan’s
brother Denis has the perfect description: "Everyone who knew
Neilly Mochan will tell you that he was a joker and a smiler.” He
also remembers the light-hearted nature of his big brother. “Our
Neilly was never dour. His nickname of ‘Smiler’ was a football
thing and we never called him that around the house. When you play
football, your team-mates or newspaper reporters often give you
nicknames and Neilly’s was ‘Smiler’. He was the oldest of the
boys in our house and we used to call him ‘Our Big Yin’.”
The
Author does somewhat agree that Neilly
Mochan has an underrated history at Celtic: "I think the
importance of Neilly Mochan has been underrated as he played in an
inconsistent and under-achieving team in the 1950s (even though their
triumphs were spectacular).
“He
was then part of Jock Stein's back-room team and so he would always
be in the shadows there. However, the historians have always lauded
his role and I hope that the biography and documentary can keep that
fire burning now. I
think that the 50s are not as extensively covered as the 60s and
beyond and for that reason Neilly's story was in the vaults.
Thankfully now I have told it in film and print and I hope a new
generation of supporters can learn about Celtic's Smiler.”
"Neilly
was a small, powerful, deceptively quick scorer of thunderbolt shots.
He could play left wing, centre forward and even left back. There is
no-one like him! There
are a few figures in the history of Celtic Football Club whose
stories are legendary but for some reason no one has put them into
print. Neilly Mochan served Celtic for 40 years and epitomised
everything that was special about the club. It was an absolute honour
to be asked by his son to write his story.”
www.smilerdoc.com
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