Mowbray rules out wielding the axe
Mowbray met the media at Celtic Park yesterday after being confirmed as Gordon Strachan’s successor and he outlined his plans for the future.
Celtic fans will hope to see some changes in the squad that lost the Clydesdale Bank Premier League title to Rangers last season and a host of players have already been linked with moving in and out of the club in recent weeks.
Mowbray, who claimed he was “comfortable” with the budget handed to him by chief executive Peter Lawwell, is tasked with bringing flair back to the Parkhead side which, according to many supporters, was missing under Strachan.
However, the former Celtic defender, who will be joined by his assistant Mark Venus and former Hoops team-mate Peter Grant as coach, warned there will be evolution rather than revolution in Glasgow.
“I’m not coming here with a big axe to swing and cut everything out,” Mowbray said.
“I don’t want to sit here and say we need a new player in this position or that position. That is disrespectful to the squad. There is a natural evolution of a football team over time.
“When I was at West Brom, within two and a half years, there was only two players left.
“Hopefully the supporters in time, hopefully a short period of time, will see the stamp of how I like the game to be played coming across.”
Mowbray added: “I’m very comfortable with budgets.
“This is not a football club who is going to spend way over its budget and put its financial future in jeopardy.
“But we must try to entertain. A lot of managers say you have to win and that’s all that people want but I think you must try to entertain and win as well.’’
Mowbray’s most immediate job will be to get his squad ready for the first of possibly two tricky Champions League qualifiers at the end of the July.
The former Hibernian boss, however, looked forward to a time when the Parkhead side would again be a team feared in Europe.
“The team is what it is at the moment,” he said. “Within six weeks, I am not going to change the whole philosophy of the playing style and the mind-set of the footballers.
“A lot of the players have a lot of European experience and we will have to draw on that in six weeks time and try and set the team up to try and come through some qualifying games.
“I would like to build a team that can compete at all levels, to be feared and respected, not only in the Scottish game but in Europe.
“And that’s a process that you have got to build. There are some major powers in the world with some major resources but what I’ve got to try and do is to put together a team that can punch above its weight.
“But you watch (Andres) Iniesta, Xavi, (Lionel) Messi and great players like that.
“Without trying to write headlines, that is what inspires me.
“I need to be inspired as well and the supporters need inspiring.
“When I watch Spain, Barcelona and great technical teams and players, I try and recreate that where possible.’’





