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I spoke to some of the players and then we came back in on Tuesday and it's business as usual, you've got a game to play the next day."Rodgers won four titles, along with seven cup triumphs, over his two stints as manager, with McGregor a midfield regular in the first spell and skipper for the second."Hopefully he'll be judged for what he's done for the club," McGregor added. "Going back 10 years, he changed the landscape of this club massively."The success we've had was because of the values and work ethic he instilled when he came in the first time - and that has carried us through a long period."Unfortunately, in football everything comes to an end.
Football can be brutal at times, that's just the way it is."As a club, we have a lot to thank him for."He was amazing for my career. He's done so much for me, so on a personal level I have so much to thank him for and I'm sure whatever he does next he'll be a big success."Kennedy ended a 27-year association with Celtic, having joined as a teenager and serving as assistant to Neil Lennon and Ange Postecoglou as well as Rodgers.Hailing his "incredible contribution", McGregor said of Kennedy: "He took a lot of responsibility and he's someone I have huge admiration for.
He was someone you could rely on in difficult times."I don't think he got the credit he deserves. I think you'll be hard pushed to find a better assistant manager."McGregor went on to say that O'Neill and Maloney have "come in with a real positivity", stressing that the former "understands the fabric of the club".On 73-year-old O'Neill, he added: "He's a really good person and he has good people around him.
