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The Scottish Premier League has long been a private title battle between the Old Firm with the other clubs reduced to contesting a UEFA Cup spot, derby wins and even the honour of being a top-six team after the league splits. This campaign has so far been as predictable as ever, but with a significant difference. The catalyst of Hearts’ incredible run (eight games, eight wins at the time of writing) is printed boldly on the team’s strips. Ukio Bankas is not just the team sponsor but also the Lithuanian bank part-owned by the club’s owner Vladimir Romanov. Since replacing former manager John Robertson with George Burley, Romanov has bankrolled an influx of foreign talent to the club that Burley has quickly gelled into a highly effective team. Their blistering start to the season has, of course, gone done well with their swollen support, but it also represents a possible salvation for a league that has grown tired and internecine. There have been various causes for the latter, such as persistent relegation issues and the fiasco over Dunfermline’s plastic pitch, but uncertainty over the Old Firm’s position is the biggest factor. The two Glasgow monoliths have been hankering after membership of the English Premier League since its inception and officials from both clubs were involved in the development plans of the abandoned Atlantic League. When only two other clubs (Aberdeen and Dundee United) have won the SPL since its first version arrived in 1975, you can understand the Old Firm’s demands for greater competition.
However, what are equally clear are the motivations behind their planned elope. If Hearts can win the league, or even split Celtic and Rangers by gaining second place, then the Old Firm will no longer be able to cite lack of credible opposition as an excuse for leaving. Only the yearning for greater financial returns, principally from television, will remain and it is unlikely that even UEFA would bow to such an obviously mercenary attitude. From WSC 225 November 2005. What was happening this month On the subject...
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