Celtic have officially confirmed Wilfried Nancy’s departure – and after just 33 days of chaos, dysfunction, and a 3-1 hiding from Rangers, the club has finally drawn a line under one of the most baffling missteps in recent memory.
It’s official. Celtic confirmed on January 5, 2026, that Wilfried Nancy has left the club, with the announcement published on the official Celtic FC website alongside confirmation that Head of Football Operations Paul Tisdale has also departed. Nancy’s entire backroom staff – Kwame Ampadu, Jules Gueguen, and Maxime Chalier among them – are leaving too. The whole lot. Gone.
This is not a quiet reshuffle. This is a full reset – and it needed to happen.
A Chapter Best Forgotten
Let’s be honest with ourselves here – the Nancy debacle was damaging in almost every conceivable way. Appointed with fanfare on December 3, 2025, and framed by the board as a major strategic hire, Nancy lasted barely a month before the whole thing collapsed under the weight of results that simply could not be defended.
The 3-1 defeat to Rangers – understood to be Nancy’s final game in charge – was the brutal full stop on a spell that never got off the ground. When you lose like that to them, there is no recovery window. There is no goodwill left to spend.
To be fair to Nancy, he arrived with genuine credentials. His Columbus Crew side won the 2023 MLS Cup, the 2024 Leagues Cup, reached the 2024 Concacaf Champions Cup final, and he took home the Sigi Schmid MLS Coach of the Year award. He was a proven winner across the water. What happened here was a catastrophic mismatch – of style, of timing, of circumstance. The damage is done, and no amount of revisionism changes that.
What Comes Next
Celtic say the replacement process is already underway, which is something at least. The club cannot afford to drift – not mid-season, not with so much still to play for. Martin O’Neill has been the subject of considerable speculation regarding his role in the interim period, with his own comments about his future at Celtic deliberately coy and carefully worded.
What we do know is that whoever comes in will inherit a squad requiring serious work, something O’Neill himself has already acknowledged publicly. The board would be wise to move quickly, tie down a permanent appointment, and give the new man every chance to shape the rebuild before the window slams shut.
The football operations structure has been stripped back to the studs. It is on the board now to rebuild it properly – and this time, get it right.
We’ve had enough of bleak midwinters. Time to look forward. Mon The Hoops.
Conor Spence