
Celtic fan takes DUCK to Parkhead title party to celebrate with Hoops stars – days after viral stadium tour photo
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
All kinds of people turned up at Parkhead to celebrate Celtic's league championship win - dads, mums, sons, daughters, granddads and grannies.
Oh, and a duck.
Sign up for the Celtic newsletter
Sign up
4
There was a fowl at Celtic Park today...
4
The fan with the duck in his hand
4
Scores of Hoops supporters turned up to welcome their title-winning team
Credit: PA
Thousands of Hoops supporters turned up outside their team's ground after a 5-0 victory over Dundee United at Tannadice officially crowned them champions.
The fans were in party mode and Daizen Maeda further endeared himself to the Celtic faithful when he unexpectedly trolled Rangers.
The Japanese forward declared "Glasgow is green" from the podium on the Celtic way as the squad spoke to the adoring support after securing their 55th league title.
Among those lapping up Maeda's comments was a fan who had brought his DUCK with him.
Video footage from Sky Sports captured the punter showing off the bird outside the ground, as other fans came up to see it.
The man was heard telling someone what the green garment covering the animal's rear end was.
Indeed, it was a Celtic-themed nappy.
He said: "That's a nappy. A Celtic nappy."
The fowl sighting comes days after a photo went viral of what looks like the same duck being given a tour of Celtic Park - in a PRAM.
But with the large crowds gathering at the ground today, the pram was left at home.
Celtic fans demand 'build him a statue' after Daizen Maeda trolls Rangers during four-in-a-row title party
The streets in and around the Parkhead area of Glasgow were lined with droves of Hoops fans long before the team bus had arrived back from Dundee.
A DJ kept supporters entertained until Brendan Rodgers & co arrived, with white and gold smoke bombs filling the sky.
John McLaughlin, 64, a supermarket worker from nearby Carlton, was among the throng.
He said: 'Glasgow is green and white.
'It's just fantastic to see so many people of all ages here celebrating.
'The atmosphere is incredible.
'But this is just the warm-up for the big party in a few weeks.'
4
The duck at Celtic Park on a stadium tour a few days ago
Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Byron Buxton's bat backs righty David Festa as Twins top Rangers
June 12 - Byron Buxton went 3-for-3 with a double, a home run and three RBIs, and the Minnesota Twins pulled away for a 6-2 win over the Texas Rangers on Wednesday night in Minneapolis. Willi Castro finished 2-for-3 with a triple and two RBIs for Minnesota, which evened the series at a win apiece with the rubber match scheduled for Thursday afternoon. Carlos Correa had two hits, including a double, and drove in a run. Marcus Semien homered for the Rangers, whose three-game winning streak was halted. Josh Smith went 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI. Twins right-hander David Festa (1-1) held the Rangers to two runs on three hits and two walks in six innings, striking out four. The 25-year-old earned his first victory since Aug. 5, 2024, against the Chicago Cubs. Rangers right-hander Jack Leiter (4-3) took the loss for the first time in six starts. He allowed four runs on five hits and four walks in four innings, striking out three. Twins relief pitchers Brock Stewart, Louis Varland and Jhoan Duran followed Festa with three scoreless innings combined to preserve the victory. Duran ended the game by getting the Rangers' Adolis Garcia to ground out to second base. Texas opened the scoring on Semien's solo home run in the second. The Rangers went up 2-0 one inning later on Smith's RBI double to center field. Buxton put the Twins on top for good with a three-run homer in the bottom of the third. Brooks Lee hit a leadoff double and Christian Vazquez drew a walk before Buxton crushed a 479-foot homer to center field to make it 3-2. The blast marked Buxton's 11th homer of the season and his first since May 15. Minnesota added three runs in the fifth to increase its lead to 6-2. Castro started the scoring with a two-run triple to left that scored Matt Wallner and Ty France. Wallner had reached on a fielder's choice, and France got on base with a single. One batter later, Correa ripped a ground-rule double to drive in Castro and finish the scoring. --Field Level Media


Spectator
5 hours ago
- Spectator
Darkly comic samurai spaghetti western: Tornado reviewed
Tornado is a samurai spaghetti western starring Tim Roth, Jack Lowden and Takehiro Hira (among others). Samurai spaghetti westerns aren't anything new. In fact, we wouldn't have spaghetti westerns if it weren't for the samurai genre – Sergio Leone's Fistful of Dollars (1964) was, as Clint Eastwood conceded, an 'obvious rip-off'* of Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961) – yet this may be the first one set in 1790 and filmed in Scotland. It may also be the first one to feature thick woollens and tweed. That makes it sound twee which it isn't. It's a super-bloody revenge story filmed in just 25 days with a running time of 90 minutes. We love a 90-minute film, so I feel bad saying this, but it does feel as if it needed more time to cook. It comes flying out the gate flying, opening mid-chase with an adolescent girl (played by Koki, a famous Japanese singer-songwriter and model) running from the gang of outlaws who are on her trail. The outlaws are led by Sugarman (Roth) who would slit your throat at the drop of a hat. (The endless violence is darkly comic; expect chopped off limbs and geysers of spurting blood.) He has a resentful son, Little Sugar (Lowden), while the other woollen- and tweed-clad gang members have Guy Ritchie-esque names like Kitten (Rory McCann) or Squid Lips (Jack Morris). This is the sort of film Tom Hardy should be in but isn't. The gang pursue the girl through the forest into a mansion where she hides. What has she done? Questions are answered with a jump back in time to events earlier that day. (It turns out the opening 20 minutes come from the middle section of the story. We're doing middle, back, then forwards. I think chronological storytelling may well be over. I blame Christopher Nolan). The Japanese girl is not the Japanese girl with no name. She is called Tornado, and she and her father (Hira) are travelling puppeteers with a marionette act that stages samurai combat. It's an impoverished existence, not to her liking. She is bored and resists her father's attempt to teach her Japanese culture, honour and sword skills. Teenagers: when have they ever realised how boring they are? She wants a way out so when she crosses paths with Sugarman's gang she steals their bag of gold. She is not given to making good decisions, this wee lassie. She runs; they chase, and if you are awaiting a big twist, it doesn't come. It is light on story as well as dialogue. Thankfully, characters arrive fully formed in the hands of actors like Roth. Joanne Whalley pops up at one point and even though she only has two or three lines max, her character is fully formed. Koki, meanwhile, delivers a strong performance but Tornado may well be underwritten. Why is she so oblivious to the rising body count caused by her actions? Come the final act, which effectively turns into a superhero origins story, it turns out that she was listening to her father all along. We are meant to be rooting for her but I'm not sure I ever was. I wanted a lot more Kitten, as well as a conflict that wasn't solved by lopping someone's arm off. That said, the film is assured. It has a terrific soundtrack by Jed Kurzel, which is all pounding percussion and jagged strings with hints of Morricone, while the cinematography by Robbie Ryan delivers a beautiful yet bleak landscape beset by shimmering lochs. * When Fistful of Dollars was released Kurosawa wrote to Leone: 'It is a very fine film but it is my film… you must pay me.' He was awarded 15 per cent of all revenue.


Time Out
7 hours ago
- Time Out
This neon LIC cocktail speakeasy is an ode to Asian pop culture
Where one speakeasy quietly closes, another loudly opens—the Long Island City space formerly occupied by Chinese cocktail bar 929 (and hidden inside Taiwanese restaurant Gulp) has been reborn as a similarly numerically-titled sister spot: 56709. No, it's not named after a zip code, though the retro-futuristic, neon-laced barroom certainly transports you to a place that's decidedly not Queens. Rather, the drinks den takes its title from Japanese singer Junko Ohashi's 1984 hit "Telephone Number," and it echoes those eighties-pop nostalgia by reimagining "the sounds, sights, and textures of Japan's Showa and Heisei eras—when neon lights, telephones, and upbeat City Pop melodies defined a generation," per the bar team. Continuing 929's mission of "celebrating music, cocktails and Asian pop culture," the new concept is tricked out with vintage Japanese posters, collectible records, and a curated display of retro telephones from the owners' personal collections. Neon lighting and chrome details nod to futuristic Tokyo skylines, while warm wood accents and soft seating beckon you to linger. Cocktails, too, take influence from Japanese musical legends: There's the Junko's Old Fashioned (flavored with persimmon and chestnut), Ryuichi's Negroni (a yuzu-and-sencha sipper named for Luna Sea frontman Ryuichi Kawamura), Mariya's Whisky Sour (a savory tribute to the Queen of City Pop, made with barley tea and kombu) and a genmaicha-honeydew daiquiri in honor of the "Eternal Idol," Seiko Matsuda. Several drinks will also pay tribute to beloved Japanese anime characters, including the Pokémon-inspired "Pika Pika," the "Arale" cocktail named after the main character in the 1980 classic Dr. Slump, and the "Ranma" cocktail paying homage to Ranma 1⁄2. 'When we create a cocktail, we don't just think about flavor—we dive deep into the story behind the inspiration,' said beverage director Chaoyi Chen. For the "Pika Pika," which is made with rum, tomato, mango, sunflower seeds, cheese, and topped with soda, " the sunflower seeds and cheese nod to Pikachu's Rodent-Pokémon classification, while the tomato references his well-known love of ketchup from the anime," Chen explained. "Mango brings in Pikachu's iconic yellow hue, and the soda's fizz evokes his electric energy.' The folks over at Gulp will continue to take care of the food, with new menu items like a baked sweet potato with miso butter and meat floss (a reimagining of the Taiwanese street snack), fried oysters with yuzu tartare sauce (a night-market favorite with a Japanese twist) and ochazuke, a traditional Japanese rice-and-broth dish, here topped with salted and dried mullet roe. Set to open its doors on Friday, June 12, 56709 is located at 4245 27th Street and will be open Tuesday to Thursday from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m., Friday and Saturday from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. and Sunday from 5 p.m. to midnight.