Last update December 25, 2019 by Javier Argudo
If there is a main reason why this page exists, it is precisely to relive stories like the one that we are going to tell you next and whose protagonist is Jimmy Johnstone who led one of the best generations of Scottish footballers ever to exist.
To put ourselves in a situation we must travel a year 1967. That season the Celtic de Glasgow made a historic plenary session winning all the titles in which he participated: League, Cup, League Cup, Copa de Glasgow y… Copa de Europa.
THE LIONS OF LISBON
Of course, we are going to focus on that mythical final held in Lisbon that the Scots arrived to face, no more no less, that at Inter de Milan led by the best coach of the moment, Helenio Herrera, which had a real team of soccer players of the level of Facchetti, Domenghini, Cappellin O Course.
But the boys of the green and white striped t-shirt they were determined to surprise. Especially convinced was his coach, Jock Stein, who harangued his boys from the beginning so they could go all out: “Si alguna vez en su vida van a ganar la Copa de Europa, tiene que ser hoy”.
That Celtic was made up of a group of boys who had been born and raised to less than 20 miles from the clubhouse. As told by his great star and one of the team leaders, the tiny Jimmy Johnstone: “Éramos un grupo de amigos que crecimos jugando juntos. La clave de lo que pasaba dentro del terreno del juego era que éramos una pandilla de amigos fuera de él”.
Of course it was not easy to lift that European Cup against the almighty Inter. Own Johnstone He told what they felt in the long tunnel of changing rooms when the players of both teams agreed: “Allí estaban los italianos, tall and tan, with their perfect smiles and slicked back hair. They looked like movie stars. They even smelled good. And there we were, toothless dwarfs. I did not have, Bobby Lennox tampoco, ni ronnie simpson. Los italianos debían creer que nos habían sacado de un circo”.
THE CELTIC CHAMPION OF EUROPE
The match couldn't start worse. To the 7 minutes, penalty favorable to Inter, who was ahead on the scoreboard and could play against, how more comfortable he felt. But it was then that the Celtic He honored his great game and launched the attack as if there was no tomorrow. 42 shots on goal, 24 of them between the three sticks, 18 stops by the Italian goalkeeper and three balls to the posts perfectly summarize the Scottish siege.
All this effort had its reward and the Celtic managed to come back scoring the tie in the minute 63 by mediation Tommy Gemmell and the final 2-1 at 84 thanks to Stevie Chalmers. ‘The Lions of Lisbon’, as the protagonists of this beautiful story were nicknamed, they passed to posterity forever consecrating themselves as the first British team to be champion of Europe.