October 2023 by Archie Mcinally
Easily top 10 cash-points I've ever seen
December 2017 by Fish C.
The best Scottish club ever Brendan roger led us to victory and will do it again #rangersuck
May 2017 by Vivek T.
Soaking up the atmosphere before and during a great game between Celtic and St Johnstone. Fans been well behaved, amazing stadium and great weather! Pies and chips small portions bigger prices!!
May 2015 by Craig H.
The Celtic Football Club are a professional football club based in Glasgow, Scotland which plays in the Scottish Premiership. Since playing its first game in 1888, Celtic has never been relegated. Celtic was initially founded to raise money for the poor in the East End of Glasgow and the club still retain strong charitable traditions today. On 9 August 2011 Celtic held a testimonial match in honour of former player John Kennedy. Due to the humanitarian crisis in East Africa, the entire proceeds were donated to Oxfam. An estimated £300,000 was raised. In 1995 the Celtic charity fund was formed with the aim of "revitalising Celtic's charitable traditions" and to August 2011 has raised over £3 million. Celtic hold an annual charity fashion show at Celtic Park. In 2011 the main beneficiaries were Breast Cancer Care Scotland. Yorkhill Hospital is another charity with whom Celtic are affiliated and in December 2011 the club donated £3000 to it. Chief Executive Peter Lawwell said that; "Celtic has always been much more than a football club and it is important that, at all times we play an important role in the wider community. The club is delighted to have enjoyed such a long and positive connection with Yorkhill Hospital." Celtic have won the Scottish League Championship on 46 occasions, most recently in the 2014-15 season, the Scottish Cup 36 times and the Scottish League Cup 15 times. The club's greatest season was 1966-67, when Celtic became the first British team to win the European Cup, also winning the Scottish League Championship, the Scottish Cup, the Scottish League Cup, and the Glasgow Cup. Celtic also reached the 1970 European Cup Final, and the 2003 UEFA Cup Final. Celtic's stadium is Celtic Park, which is in the Parkhead area of Glasgow. Celtic Park, an all-seater stadium with a capacity of 60,355, is the largest football stadium in Scotland and the seventh-largest stadium in the United Kingdom, after Murrayfield, Old Trafford, Twickenham, Wembley, the London 2012 Olympic Stadium and the Millennium Stadium. It is commonly known as Parkhead or Paradise.
May 2015 by Fox E.
If you are a seller of thumb tacks (UK: drawing pins) then you "Sell Tacks", which is about how you pronounce Celtic with a Scottish accent, by the way. Similarly, if you are a SeaLion and you do cool things to impress onlookers, then you do SealTricks. But seriously, Celtic is one of the great teams of the whole world, let alone the UK. The biggest club in Scotland on every level, playing in a palace of a 60k stadium, which includes a Graveyard so hardcore fans can be buried here! That's how much Celtic means. First-Hand Experience: this is my fave club in Scotland, and one of my 10 fave clubs in the world. I've seen them live at this stadium many times, I've also seen them away from home at Anfield (Liverpool), other Scottish clubs, and even in Cleveland Browns Stadium facing Boca Juniors. I can't really count the number of times I've watched them play but it's been around a dozen or more. Most recently was 2014. They're a wonderful club with wonderful fans. Being inside Celtic Park is one of the best stadium experiences for any fan anywhere. Plus they are linked to my fave team Liverpool in many ways and to my mother's homeland of Ireland. So they mean a lot to me. Watching them is a religious experience - and yes that is an in-joke. Since religion is so heavily linked to this club and Rangers. Celtic (pronounced Seyll-takk in the local accent, and never Kel-tic, ever) are bitter rivals of Rangers, and the religious element means the hatred runs deep. The Irish were always the outcasts and underdogs but when it comes to football they are the big boy. Rangers has won more Scottish League titles, but Celtic is bigger in every other way. They play in famous green and white hoops. The stadium is in the rough East End of town. I had a gun pointed at me outside their stadium. Since their first game in 1888, they have never been relegated, which is very impressive, especially now that Rangers were demoted and so Celtic are the only team not to be relegated. They have won the Scottish League 46 times and are the current champs. They're within 10 of Rangers' record. They've won the Scottish Cup 36 times and the League Cup 15 times. In 1967 they amazingly became the first British team to win the European Cup, with Manchester United, Liverpool (4 times in a few years) and Nottingham Forest following suit within a decade or so. They were runners up in the 1970 European Cup and in the 2003 UEFA Cup, meaning they have reached 3 major European finals, winning one. In 67 they had beaten Inter Milan in the final, whereas in 70 they lost to Feyenoord at the San Siro. Their greatest managers include Martin O'Neill who got them to the UEFA Cup Final, and Neil Lennon who got Celtic to a few Champions League knockout phases. Celtic's club magazine is the oldest in the football world, from 1965. There are supposedly 9 million Celtic fans around the world including 1 million in the US and Canada. Like Liverpool, they sing "You'll Never Walk Alone" before every game, and they never will.
February 2015 by Andy S.
Excellent Hospitality Packages * Excellent Food * Plenty Of Staff * Very Attentive Staff * Great Atmosphere * Hospitality Stadium Seating Was Excellent, Great View & Comfortable Will definetley go back!
April 2014 by Brian B.
I don't think I can write much more about Celtic Football Club, as after reading a few of the reviews already written however my first memory if ever watching Celtic was at primary school when Celtic were playing in the final of the European Cup in 1967. I was 10 and the headmaster allowed four classes to watch the full game in the assembly hall along with the then Parish Priest , Father Fitzgerald and not forgetting the " Janny" Mr Donnelly I clearly remember when Celtic won the cup both the headmaster the priest and the janny went ballistic jumping up and down with sheer joy, I think that was the first ever Celtic Huddle I ever seen and we all joined in ( oh happy innocent days tear coming on just at the memory of it all) the excitement carried on all week and at school the atmosphere was electric everybody was talking about the Big Cup coming home , that memory is still very clear in my mind although it was 47 years ago. Later on that week we were allowed home early from school to wait for the Celtic bus arriving at the airport ( never happen in this day and age , or would it ? ) me and a few pals made our way to the stadium to wait and when we were on the road the crowds just got bigger and bigger and they were all singing and dancing in the streets for me being so young this was just magical as I had never been inside the stadium at all but now this was my chance, walking up those stairs (old Celtic end) to be greeted by a sea of green and white was nothing short if absolute bliss I still tingle to this day at the thought of it. Standing there when the team arrived watching them go round the stadium in an old lorry with the Big Cup dining and dancing laughing and crying seemed to be the emotions of all the adults that day, I will never ever forget that time it was truly magical a bit like Seville many years later but this time I was the adult And my two boys who went to Seville will I'm sure tell there children the day they went to Seville as I told my kids about the Big Cup coming home
April 2014 by Paul O.
Celtic park is electric. The best stadium in the uk with the best atmosphere aswell.... Can't beat European champions league games and the games against the zombies.
September 2013 by Austen M.
It's shocking that it has taken me to my 47th review to do this one, but here it finally is. Over the past decade or two I have been to Celtic Park literally hundreds of times, so you now know up front that clearly I am a fan. Having been to football grounds as famous as Anfield, Old Trafford, the Nou Camp, etc, I can certainly state that Celtic Park is on a par with any of these places. What sets it apart is the 5 star atmosphere created by the supporters who are known for producing the noise to help push the team over the line during important matches. Get yourself along to a match to sample the atmosphere, a champions league match is particularly recommended if you can get a ticket. Alternatively you can do the museum tour. I have done it a few times now with friends who have come to visit Glasgow. You get to hear about the famous history of Celtic and see parts of the stadium you normally would not have access to.
July 2013 by Tony C.
I'm going to try and not be biased, as a Celtic fan. I want to be objective, above all. Celtic Park is located in the East of Glasgow, a 10 minute walk from Dalmarnock station, served by all manner of major bus routes from the city centre and further afield, and is well signposted once you reach the local area. On match day, you'll find streets packed with merchandise sellers, food vans and programme sellers, not to mention thousands of fans. Prices for matches vary, and tickets are usually required - check the club webstite or the ticket office at the ground for details. Prices can range anywhere from £10 for adults up to £50 depending on which match and competition. On non match days, there's a tour of the ground available, which I've done and would recommend even for non-Celtic fans. Match day inside the ground could be better, however. Mobile phone signal is patchy (WiFi is promised for this season onwards, but not sure how that will work yet or how much, if anything, it will cost). The major downfall for me is the refreshment situation. The staff are clearly under prepared for such big crowds. It usually takes me 20-25 minutes to get served, no matter what part of the stadium I'm in, and as with most sports stadiums, the prices are vastly inflated. It's something that definitely needs addressed, and I'd happily give the full five stars if it was. Other than that, there is no finer atmosphere, in my humble opinion, than a big European football night at Celtic Park under the floodlights. It really does raise the hairs on the back of your neck.
April 2013 by Qype User (JamesH?)
Incredible atmosphere for a Champions League Match i went to, i would love to go again.
December 2012 by Leia M.
The best stadium (In my opinion) in the world with the best atmosphere and fans in the world too! Home of the SPL Champions - Glasgow Celtic.!
November 2012 by Kati B.
Oooooh right-o. I realise that my review may be a slight bit affected from last night's breathtaking match performance against Barca and the victory alcohol still coursing through ma veins. But oooohhh... Celtic! Oooohhh... Parkhead! I wonder if there'll be a spike in the Scottish birthrate come August 2013... Granted it's not in the most beautiful part of town, but well hey-ho, the dichotomy just adds all the more to the beauty that awaits you when you enter the stadium, literally feel the pulse of the crowd around you, and smell the faint sweetness of the primed grass just leading up to a match. And I love that there's no smoking here! The east side is up and coming and will yet again have it's glory days, I tell ya! I awoke yesterday morning to an envelope left by ma gorgeous husband, containing a card with some simple but poignant and heartfelt lines: It's been twelve years and still I feel the best is yet to come. Each day with you, my cracker dear makes my heart undone. Shall the next twelve or twenty-four years prove as joyful as the last... Oh boy. I'm going to need a helmet, frying pan, and a good bit of rope! (The last bit is a wee inside joke - oh how he makes me smile :) This was followed by another note asking me to come out to the kitchen... so I could please make him breakfast!! Keeping it real, the joker :D Okay, I'm getting way off track here -- the final part informed me that in the evening I was to be dressed and ready for action, excitement, rain, and lots and lots of men. I thought silk and pearls were the traditional 12th anniversary gifts, but hey - when your husband offers you an orgy in the mud with lots of men, what's a gal to say? Needless to say, the incredible man knows me through and through. Fast forward to the evening, I am wrapped to the gills in raingear and wellies, just about to be handed two tickets to a champions league match, ultimately to watch Celtic defeat Barca on their home turf, more or less right in our backyard. I had no words then. Might have squealed for about 5 minutes straight, which explains the neighbourhood dogs going nuts. And today I still have no words (except what is turning out to be a giant essay on this here yelp!), mainly because I lost my voice last night somewhere between the 84th and 85th minute. I'm going to try and be as objective as I can this morning, and with this disclaimer, I would still venture to say that Celtic Park is one of the more lovelier stadiums I've been to throughout the UK. But a stadium is just a stadium and an ark is just an ark - nothing more - without its animals and inhabitants to bring it to life. And that infectious buzz around and in, before during and after... I'm still humming with the energy of the day and night. My husband is a rugby man and doesn't care as much for footy - one of the rare times we have to fight for the remote - but as for me? Give me a symmetrically round ball! I love football - standing up, sitting down, up against a wall, in a dark room in the back - any which way ;) - but above all else, in a glorious stadium with a glorious tradition and a heart tugging history to back it all up. There's something truly magical about Celtic Park. Even if it's not your home team, a visit is a must for any football fan. Before turning out the lights, my husband told me that we might not make it to 125 years, but that he hoped to die trying.
July 2012 by Christoph S.
Been there for a Uefa match stunning atmosphere. We were probably the only Germans in the park supporting Celtic and the people around us were just great. One guy gave us his scarf. It was just a great day!
October 2011 by Qype User (robert?)
Most amazing place in scotland our team are there week in week out thank you paradise