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Leggat - Brian McNally And How To Crush His Rangers Lies


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RANGERS supporters will meet this week to draw up plans to stop Mirror Group Newspapers sports writer Brian Patrick McNally peddling dangerous lies about them and Ibrox manager Alistair McCoist.

 

And I also understand that Rangers fans will also be urging Charles Green to step in and contact Mirror Group Newspapers senior executives in Glasgow and London. They want the club to carry the fight against their employee Brian Patrick McNally and his lies, right to the top at the Mirrorâ??s Canary Wharf headquarters.

 

The Rangers move against Brian Patrick McNally could not come at a better time, for Mirror Group bosses are reeling after £25M was wiped off the value of the newspapers following revelations that Mirror Group is now at the centre of a new phone hacking probe,

 

Brian Patrick McNallyâ??s latest outburst of hate and bile against Rangers manager Alistair McCoist and Rangers supporters appeared on his official Mirror Twitter account.

 

He claimed that McCoist would not understand the irony of wearing an anti racism badge during Sundayâ??s game against Clyde at the same time as Rangers fans were belting out the Famine Song.

 

But there is no evidence of Rangers fans singing the Famine Song. For the simple reason, they did not sing it.

 

Whether or not Brian Patrick McNally, who is on record as admitting he is a heavy drinker, was under the influence when he penned this lie, is not known.

 

Or whether it was a deliberate attempt by Brian Patrick McNally to do damage to Rangers as the new regime's share issue approaches, is also not known. For certain.

 

What is known is that Rangers supporters did most emphatically not sing the Famine Song when they were at Broadwood on Sunday cheering their team on to a 2-0 win over Clyde.

 

What they did sing was Four Men Had A Dream, the wonderfully evocative song which tells the romantic story of the birth of Rangers by the Gallant Pioneers 140 years ago.

 

Now Brian Patrick McNallyâ??s latest outburst could lead to serious ramifications which will damage the fortunes of his paymasters, Mirror Group Newspapers, on this side of the border.

 

For the Mirror Group, as well as publishing the Sunday Mirror, the paper North-East of England based Brian Patrick McNally works for, also own and publish the Daily Record and Sunday Mail.

 

What Rangers fans aim to tell Mirror Groupâ??s top bosses is that unless they order Brian Patrick McNally to issue a public apology and order him to stop publishing lies about them, there will be an organised and orchestrated campaign by them to boycott the Daily Record and Sunday Mail.

 

I also understand that the leaders of a number of Rangers fansâ?? organisations and a number of prominent Rangers supporters want to speak to Ibrox chief executive Charles Green and ask him to join their campaign.

 

Green and the new regime has shown a taste for the fight when it comes to standing up for Rangers and this latest outbreak of lies directed at the supporters of Rangers from Brian Patrick McNally, is sure to provoke ire inside Ibrox.

 

Among those at the top of the ailing Mirror Group empire who can expect to be inundated with complaints about the wild-eyed rants of Brian Patrick McNally are chief executive, Simon Fox, chief operating officer and Glasgow based Mark Hollinshead, the publishing director of the Mirror national newspaper titles, which includes the Daily Record and Sunday Mail, Paula Scott, the editor-in-chief of the Daily and Sunday Mirrors, Lloyd Embley, plus the editor-in-chief of the Daily Record and Sunday Mail, Allan Rennie.

 

Simon Fox â?? chief executive.

Mark Hollinshead â?? chief operating officer.

Paul Scott â?? publishing director.

Lloyd Embley â?? editor-in-chief Daily and Sunday Mirror.

Allan Rennie â?? editor-in-chief Daily Record and Sunday Mail.

 

Mark those names well!

 

The sports-editor-in-chief of the Daily Record and Sunday Mail, Celtic supporting Austin Barrett, can also expect his email in-box to fill up with requests that he do something to stop Brian Patrick McNally spreading lies about Rangers.

 

Lies which could send the Daily Record and Sunday Mail circulations, already in steep decline, into a fatal freefall.

 

Those who are mustering and planning to move against Brian Patrick McNally may like to know a little more about this Glasgow born sports writer, who works in England and claims to be Irish.

 

And when they get complaints about their employee, Mirror Group Newspapers' senior executives may also like to know more about the man they employ.

 

I am happy to oblige.

 

By his own admission Brian Patrick McNall says his father was William Francis McNally, born in Glasgow in 1919 after his father, Francis had moved to Scotland from Monaghan at the turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries. His mother, he tells us, was Kate Boyle from Middleton, Derrybeg, Gweedore, Co Donegal in the Republic of Ireland.

 

Now let us turn to posts on the Celtic Quick News site by someone whose nom de guerre is Sean South.

 

In a number of posts we get a number of clues to the identity of Sean South, who says he has been in a pub called Seanâ??s while in Derrybeg â?? the birthplace of Brian Patrick McNallyâ??s mother. He also adds that he has never watched a match there as he has only ever been there in the close season.

 

He then goes on to tell us a little more about himself, revealing that the people who run the Ostan Radharc na Mara Hotel in Derrybeg are related to his late mother, whose surname, he adds, was Boyle, but whose name in Derrybeg was Kitty Anne Dermot.

 

All of which most surely counts as evidence that Brian Patrick McNally of the Sunday Mirror, a man who has lied about Rangers, and Sean South on Celtic Quick News, are one and the same.

 

But why did Brian Patrick McNally of the Sunday Mirror chose Sean South as his nom de guerre on Celtic Quick News? As this is meant to be a football forum about a football club, why did he not chose a name from Celticâ??s past. Why, for instance did he not chose one with links to Ireland. Bertie Peacock, a great Celtic player and captain is one name which springs to mind.

 

No, the name chosen by Brian Patrick McNally was that of an IRA terrorist and well known Fascist, Sean South. Are we to assume by his choice of nom de guerre that Brian Patrick McNally admires the real Sean South?

 

Are we to assume that Brian Patrick McNally, a sports writer employed by Mirror Group Newspapers , admires Sean South because he was an IRA terrorist and murderer?

 

Or are we to assume that Brian Patrick McNally, a Scot who lives and works for Mirror Group Newspapers in England, admires Sean South for the fact that he was a Fascist?

 

These are questions I am sure the senior management men and women at the top of the Mirror Group will be pleased to hear Brian Patrick McNally answer when they question him on why he spreads lies about Rangers, Rangers manager Alistair McCoist and those who support Rangers.

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