Career
After a single year in charge in the Premier League, where he consolidated their position, he left after an approach from, who themselves had just been promoted to the Premier League, stating he felt Monklands Ladies were unable to match his ambitions. Caulfield joined Celtic in February 2011 following his surprise departure from where he spent 11 years in charge, winning five Scottish Women"s Premier League titles, three Scottish Cups and two Premier League cups. He was appointed manager at Celtic in January 2013 following two years spent as assistant manager to Robert Docherty.
He resigned from Celtic on 25 July 2013, only five months into his first season in charge of the team
In a statement, the club cited "work and family reasons." for his departure. Caulfield"s playing career in the Scottish Junior ranks was curtailed by a broken legal
This success in Europe, combined with winning the domestic treble in 2008-2009, made Caulfield the most successful manager ever in Scottish women"s football history. At the start of the 2008-2009 season, after a few years of planning, Caulfield formed a reserve team at, made up entirely of girls 14 to 17 years of age, and entered them into the Scottish women"s senior leagues - Second Division West.
When the team lifted the trophy, beating Celtic"s reserve side 3–0, in the final at Lesser Hampden, they became the youngest team to lift the trophy as well as the only Second Division club to do southern