Roy Aitken
It is highly unlikely Al Ahli's players know that their director of football, Roy Aitken, enjoyed two very different nicknames during his long career as a player.
The first moniker that he earned
as a teenage professional was Shirley, as in Temple, because of his curly locks. The second was Bear, which if you ever saw the Scot play needs no further explanation.
It would be wise of the Dubai club's charges, who will be closely monitored by Aitken over the coming months, to resist calling him by that first nom de plume.
"Feed the Bear" was the cry from Glasgow Celtic fans ever time Aitken gave them cause to cheer him, which in 669 appearances, third top of the club's all-time list, was quite a lot. He was, after all, a big man who certainly looked as if he could eat a centre-forward for breakfast.
If Al Ahli's thought process regarding Aitken returning to the club is to provide the squad with some backbone, then they could hardly have employed a better man.
The lingering image of Robert Sime Aitken, in the minds of those who watched him in his long pomp, is with first pumped, barking orders to his troops. When he charged forward from defence, head down with ball at his feet, the other team got out of his way if they knew what was good for them.
However, it would be wrong to suggest the only thing Al Ahli's players and coaching staff will learn from Aitken is the ability to scare the wits out of opponents, although there were few better at those dark arts.
"If Roy had been playing now, he'd be worth millions," so said Andy Roxburgh, a technical director with Uefa and the Scotland manager when he named Aitken his captain at the 1990 World Cup.
"He played as a centre-half for most of his career, but in all honesty he was a world class defensive midfielder, which weren't common in his day. Now, every team has at least one."
And, yet, there were always some not entirely convinced by a player who made his debut at 17 and was a first-team regular at Celtic Park for 14 years during which time he won six league titles, five Scottish Cups and League Cups.
Two League Cup finals against city rivals Rangers (1984 and 1986) where lost to penalties he conceded, and he was never as dominant in Europe as the domestic scene, however, it would churlish to suggest that he was anything other than a top class footballer who also won more than 50 caps for his country.
"We did a stats test once and found that Roy's stats were miles better than anyone else. He just never gave away the ball, said Craig Brown, who was Roxburgh's assistant with the Scotland national team, before going on to manage the side himself.
"He was a far more skilful and intelligent player than people ever gave him credit for. He could have kept possession all day."
Aitken's peak came in the 1987/88 season, Celtic's centenary. He was captain, and an inspiring one at that, as Celtic won the league and cup double.
"Roy was immense that season," said Billy McNeill, who was the Celtic manager at the time and is top of the club appearance list.
"We won so many matches late on and I'm not sure we would have if he hadn't been there to roar on the boys."
One memorable game was the Scottish Cup semi-final against Heart of Midlothian when, with three minutes remaining, Celtic were a goal down and staring defeat in the face. Paul McStay, the other man who sits above Aitken on that appearance list, spoke about that day in the club's official history DVD. "We managed to equalise late on through Mark McGhee and there were 10 of us on the park who had settled for a replay, and then this voice comes from the back 'come on, we can do it' and we scored in the last minute," he said.
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