Nancy likened his philosophy to ‘a boxing match and a game of chess’

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There has never been a single, unified ‘Celtic support.’ There are factions, temperaments, competing emotions, and deeply held convictions shaped by our experiences of following our club…

The sceptical, the intrigued, and the scunnered

So, it’s no surprise that Wilfried Nancy’s name arrives at a fanbase arguably split three ways. The sceptical, the intrigued, and the scunnered.

One group who feel the appointment is underwhelming, another who have dived deep into his MLS work and found themselves unexpectedly excited, and another group who are too disillusioned with the direction of the club to care who the next manager is.

Understanding Nancy’s potential as Celtic manager means acknowledging the real strengths he brings, the legitimate concerns that accompany him, and the career moments that show he is someone capable of challenging authority without losing the dressing room or abandoning an expansive, progressive footballing philosophy.

Wilfried Nancy has built his managerial reputation on a clear, modern, progressive identity that stands out even in a league like MLS, where tactical experimentation varies wildly. His Columbus Crew side were widely regarded as among the best footballing outfits in the league’s history, not because they collected points efficiently but because they played with both structure, and imagination. His football is possession-driven but not sterile, built around positional rotations, aggressive use of a back three, and movements that provoke pressure in order to break it.

He likened his philosophy to “a boxing match and a game of chess.” In his words, boxing represents the intensity he wants, on and off the ball, chess represents how he wants his team to manipulate opposition, to think several moves ahead, to force patterns.

READ THIS – A Creative Approach | Wilfried Nancy’s Footballing Philosophy | Columbus Crew

That intensity and intelligence, could resonate powerfully at Celtic, especially for supporters impatient after Brendan Rodgers conservative build-ups. Nancy doesn’t just want to win, he wants to win his way.

A defining trait of Nancy’s career is his ability to improve players. At Montréal he turned a squad with a bottom-tier budget into a tactically coherent playoff side. At Columbus he transformed ordinary or undervalued players into consistent performers operating above their perceived ceiling. Centre-backs became progressive ball carriers, midfielders learned connections and wing-backs discovered their influence on both sides of the ball.

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About Author

As a Bellshill Bhoy I was taken to my first Celtic game in the summer of 1987. It was Billy McNeill’s return to Celtic Park as manager and Celtic lost 5-1 to Arsenal . I thought I was a jinx, I think my Grandfather might have thought the same. It was the finest gift anyone ever gave me when he walked me through Parkhead's gates.

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