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Jim White expressed shock at what a Rangers fan said about Aberdeen on talkSPORT, saying, “Wow.”

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Alex Crook and Jim White were shocked live on talkSPORT as a Rangers fan admitted he is worried about Aberdeen this season.

The Gers sit third in the Scottish Premiership, five points adrift from leaders Celtic, who are level on points with Aberdeen after five matches.

A Rangers fan appeared on talkSPORT [20 September, 10:23am] to deliver his verdict on the European landscape in Scottish football and the threat of Aberdeen that left co-presenter Crook speechless.

He said: “I personally do [think Aberdeen are a threat], and Rangers need to get their act together. PC (Philippe Clement) needs to get his act together – the history is showing, what are we going to do here? Are we going to throw something away again?

“But we need coefficiency points between Rangers and Celtic with no automatic Champions League position next year and that is embarrassing.”

“Celtic will come in the top 25 in the Champions League, guaranteed 13th to 16th, absolutely 110 per cent.”

Co-host Jim White responded: “Wow, that’s quite a comment from a Rangers fan.”

Aberdeen can pose a serious threat to Rangers this season

If there was one guarantee amidst the chaos at Ibrox this summer facing Rangers heading into the new season, it would be their side and Celtic fighting for the SPFL this year.

That plan has been blown out the window by Jimmy Thelin, who has guided the Dons to a 100 per cent start to the season with Pape Gueye leading the scoring charts with five league goals.

The revival job facing Clement at Rangers is becoming more insurmountable by the day and the stronghold that the two Glaswegian sides have held over the division, albeit mostly Celtic, is threatened.

Hearts are also posing a threat as they are set to receive additional funding for the scouting department from Brighton & Hove Albion owner Tony Bloom, a move which has put the Light Blues on the back foot [Sky Sports].

Aberdeen finished ninth in the SPFL first phase and top of the relegation group last term, their resurgence at the beginning of this season while admirable is likely not to last much longer.

Clement should focus on his side with Europa League football on the horizon for Rangers. We will never know whether the Belgian would have been able to rub shoulders with some of Europe’s elite in the Champions League.

However, a good run in Europe’s second-tier competition will go a long way in helping Scotland claw their way back up the coefficient rankings – and bring some much-needed joy to Gers fans.

A research identifies a “small risk” regarding Rangers vs. Hibs ticket sales at Ibrox due to ongoing renovations.

There is a “small risk” that Ibrox will not be able to host a full allocation of Hibernian away fans for their Scottish Premiership clash with Rangers, according to the Daily Record.

The news outlet reported on Thursday [19 September] that Hibernian have been warned that their allocation for the match on 29 September could be reduced, or cut completely if the maintenance on the Coplan Road Stand is not completed in time for the tie.

Hibernian released a statement on Thursday [19 September] addressing the situation and assured supporters that the clubs are working with the SPFL to resolve the matter and are expected to receive an update early next week.

Rangers will return to Ibrox for the first time this season to face Dundee in the Scottish League Cup quarter-finals on Saturday 21 September after a delay in the building works meant the side were forced to play out their home fixtures at Hampden Park.

Rangers are at risk of falling behind in Scotland

While Rangers wait for the green light from the Glasgow City Council to open the Copland Road Stand [Daily Record], Hibs will hope their travelling supporters can make an appearance for their clash at Ibrox.

Since the Gers last played in their home stadium, the side have been dumped out of the Champions League at the qualifying stage to Dynamo Kyiv and lost the first Old Firm derby of the season 3-0 to Celtic at Parkhead.

Their SPFL title challenge appears over before it has already begun with a five-point gap emerging between themselves and Celtic with Aberdeen proving to be more of a threat to The Hoops in the early stages of the season, sitting on level points at the top of the table.

The delay in construction has proven more trouble than it’s worth for the Light Blues and led to the sacking of the project manager in a rare ruthless showing from the board.

Philippe Clement is slowly watching his side fall further and further behind the other Glaswegian club and the landscape of Scottish football is set to become more bleak for the Gers with the news that Brighton & Hove Albion owner Tony Bloom is investing £10m to improve the recruitment at Hearts [Sky Sports].

Rangers need to get a grip on the situation fast and end the ongoing setbacks plaguing the club this season or risk becoming yet another side to make up the numbers in the SPFL.

King’s Rangers return unlikely as club hunt for new chair & CEO

John Bennett stepped down as Rangers chairman “with immediate effect due to health reasons”; Dave King was keen on a return to Ibrox as chairman but that is unlikely; ex-director John Gilligan open to staying in temporary charge until new chair and CEO appointed

There have been no conversations between Rangers and former chairman Dave King over a return to the club, Sky Sports News understands.

John Gilligan, who helped King take control of Rangers in 2015 alongside Paul Murray, is in temporary charge after John Bennett stepped down as chair due to health reasons.

He is believed to be open to remaining in that role for as long as necessary, while he leads the search for a permanent successor to Bennett.

Gilligan – a former Ibrox director – met manager Philippe Clement for face-to-face talks on Monday and is thought to be fully behind the Gers boss, despite a tricky start to the season.

Rangers are five points behind Celtic, plus Aberdeen, and while fans have protested over some results, Gilligan believes Clement must be given time to help Rangers close the gap on their rivals.

It is likely the club will move to appoint a new chief executive first to replace James Bisgrove after his departure in May, as he swapped Ibrox for the Middle East.

St Mirren’s vice-chairman Jim Gillespie was the frontrunner but that fell through earlier this month and an external partner will aid Rangers’ search.

John Bennett, the chairman of the Rangers, will leave his position at Ibrox.

John Bennett is set to step down as Rangers chairman and bring an end to his tenure at the head of the Ibrox board.

The Rangers Review can reveal that Bennett is poised to quit the top job after a difficult period that has seen criticism from supporters mount and pressure build on and off the park.

Bennett stepped up to replace Douglas Park as chairman in April last year. Park held the position during Rangers’ 55th title win and the run to Seville after he succeeded Dave King at the end of his long stint the major boardroom voice and investor.

King told the Rangers Review last week that Bennett was ‘devastated’ by a chain of events that left the board under increasing pressure. The South Africa-based businessman has previously backed Bennett to lead Rangers.

“Our Club finds itself in a largely self-inflicted decline but turning on our own players is not the Rangers way,” King said as he also called out the supporters who had directed their anger at captain James Tavernier in the aftermath of the Old Firm defeat to Celtic. “I know John Bennett is devastated by current events and is working immensely hard behind the scenes. We have a challenging period ahead and need to pull together to get through it.”

Bennett – who holds a 5.51 per cent stake in RIFC plc – has now decided that he will step aside as chairman. Bennett has been a hugely influential and important investor at Ibrox over several years and his financial commitment has been crucial to funding the rebuild on and off the park following regime change in 2015.

He has come under increasing pressure this season, however, following the saga that saw Rangers forced to head to Hampden for the first weeks of the campaign. Lengthy delays in the redevelopment of the Copland Stand saw supporters point fingers at Bennett and he assumed the role of executive chairman after the departure of James Bisgrove earlier this summer.

Those feelings of discontent have been strengthened by the derby loss that leaves Philippe Clement’s side five points adrift of Celtic in the Premiership title race. Rangers return to action against Dundee United on Sunday.

“We talked about everything,” Clement said when asked what backing he had received from the Ibrox hierarchy over the course of the international break. “About the stadium, about the Celtic game, about where we are as a team now. It’s the same support as the weeks before.

“The board knows it’s the beginning of a totally new story. They understand that there are so many new players and so many players left and so many young players coming in who we need to grow in their potential.”

“I have my thoughts,” Lovenkrands tells Clement on the priorities for the Rangers.

Defeat is never an option for Rangers, but Philippe Clement will be under even more pressure if his team comes back from Tannadice without three points. 

Dundee United have yet to lose a game since bouncing back from relegation to the Championship and the manager should have his squad prepared for a tough afternoon on Sunday.

Former player Peter Lovenkrands suffered the highs and lows of being a Rangers striker and reckons that there should be one target as domestic action kicks off again.

Peter Lovenkrands details one Rangers need for Tannadice trip

Speaking to STV, the great Dane urged his old team to just go out and get the job done, whatever it takes:

“The players will be itching to get back out there and bounce back (from the defeat to Celtic).

“The main thing will be to just go out there and get a result and hopefully get themselves back on track.

“There will be a lot of things (that need changed) but it’s not for me to stand here and say what the coach has to do, that wouldn’t be fair. I’ve got my opinions but I’ll keep them to myself.

“It’s about bouncing back, the best way to get the fans back on side is to get results and get back to winning ways, so three points in the next game is all that matters.

“The fans will be there, like they always are, they will always come in their numbers so it’s just all about bouncing back and getting the win and getting back on track.”

Lovenkrands is right as pressure builds on Rangers

Lovenkrands was on co-commentary duty for the Old Firm for Rangers TV and was well spoken and insightful throughout.

The 44-year old was highlighting issues with Cyriel Dessers pressing as well as the gap between the defence and midfield when Rangers had possession.

Currently without a club, John Bennett could do a lot worse than bringing such an experienced figure back to Auchenhowie to lend a hand.

Playing for Rangers isn’t always about systems, formations and styles of play.

Lovenkrands is right, sometimes it’s just about winning.

There have been no serious injuries reported following the international break and Clement will have looked at the derby and seen who he can trust when the chips are down.

Nicolas Raskin and Oscar Cortes will be fitter and closer to starting whilst new signings Nedim Bajrami and Neraysho Kasanwirjo will also be competing for a place in the line-up.

As the former Gers flyer stated, changes are needed, just what and how many are down to Philippe Clement.

Jim White is shocked by what Martin O’Neill stated about the Rangers following their defeat by the Celtics. “Absolutely.”

Jim White was taken aback by Martin O’Neill’s claim that the current Rangers side is the worse he has ever seen after their defeat to Celtic.

The talkSPORT host was shocked live on air (5 September) as the former Hoops boss responded to Graeme Souness’ claims earlier in the week that the gap between the two Old Firm rivals wasn’t great despite a 3-0 Gers loss at Parkhead.

O’Neill laughed off that suggestion as “deluding himself”, suggesting it might be 15 years before the balance is redressed, and was then scathing in his assessment of Philippe Clement’s side.

O’Neill said: “He’s deluding himself, absolutely, because there is a gap, there’s a chasm… actually that game wasn’t close at all. Celtic were far, far better…

“The demise of Rangers… it’s been terrible, it’s really been terrible. And it doesn’t do Celtic any favours I don’t think because for Celtic to be really strong and trying to compete in European football… then Rangers have got to be strong.

“And Rangers, they’re not, they’re very, very poor. The side is, I would think, it’s as poor a Rangers side as I would have known in my time in football”.

A surprised White replied: “In your time in football? This is the poorest Rangers side?”

“Yeah, really really poor,” O’Neill confirmed. “Honestly, they’re really, really poor”.

Philippe Clement Rangers side beaten heavily at Celtic

The matter-of-fact way that 72-year-old O’Neill wrote off this Light Blues side as the worst he’s ever known caught White unawares and might have been the most damning part of his whole assessment.

It was the sort of sweeping claim that might be made when someone is worked up and trying to win an argument, but it is seemingly reached the point where it is such an easy claim to make that he could barely be bothered to contest Souness’ argument directly.

It is easy to go overboard during an international break when there is no club football to distract from the previous game so the timing of a heavy Old Firm defeat could hardly be worse from that perspective, but the atmosphere has taken a huge negative turn.

Fans were hardly feeling confident as it was after a dismal preseason, a frustrating transfer window, and a struggle to start the campaign.

But any hope injected by some late moves in the transfer market before the deadline, or a 6-0 win over Ross County a week earlier, was categorically blown away by another derby defeat in worrying fashion.

On paper it might not be a massive shock to have drawn away to Hearts, lost at Parkhead, and failed to qualify for the Champions League with a squad that couldn’t be properly overhauled due to the finances.

But that manner in which recent weeks have played out have added to the results, and it is going to take an immediate upturn in form and a run of wins after the internationals to restore any positivity.

On paper it might not be a massive shock to have drawn away to Hearts, lost at Parkhead, and failed to qualify for the Champions League with a squad that couldn’t be properly overhauled due to the finances.

Rangers held transfer talks for “brilliant” player who will be out of contract in nine months.

Rangers are said to have held talks with a “brilliant” £3m player over a move to Ibrox, according to a new update.

Pressure on Rangers after derby defeat

The Gers had an exciting summer window overall, signing many players to make Philippe Clement‘s squad stronger, with the likes of Jefte, Connor Barron, Mohamed Diomande and Robin Propper all coming in, as well as a number of other new faces.

While there was plenty of positivity going into the new Scottish Premiership season, Rangers have suffered a reality check of late, not least when they faced Celtic on Sunday afternoon. Clement’s men were soundly beaten 3-0 away to their biggest rivals, once again highlighting the gap in quality between the two sides.

The loss means that the Gers are already five points behind the Hoops after only four matches, which is a big concern, and significant improvements will need to be made after the international break as the new signings continue to adjust to playing alongside one another.

It looks as though Rangers’ transfer business is done for this year – some countries’ transfer windows are still open, so a low profile exit or two can’t be completely ruled out – but a new update has now dropped regarding a potential move for one player before on day last week.

Rangers held talks to sign “brilliant” ace

According to a new report from HITCRangers held talks with Hearts over the signing of star man Lawrence Shankland last Friday, but their asking price proved to be too high. The Gers were willing to pay £3m for the 29-year-old’s services, but his current club demanded more than that, wanting to get as much as possible for their most prized asset.

He will be out of contract in just nine months’ time, perhaps why the Gers opted to walk away and save their bank balance, considering they may be able to lure him to Ibrox for free at that point.

While Clement has missed out on Shankland for the time being, there should still be hope that Rangers can get their man in the relatively near future. Assuming he fails to sign an extension at Tynecastle, his boyhood connection to Ibrox will put them front of the queue.

The Scotland international could be a fantastic signing, even though he would be turning 30 by that point, with Neil McCann heaping praise on him: “Superlatives are becoming harder to come by when talking about Lawrence.

“His goal last week was his 30th for the season including his Scotland goal but it wasn’t the cleanest strike, tonight was just a typically brilliant goal from Lawrence Shankland. It shows you what type of striker he is, he’s so instinctive, he scores right, left, headers, instinctive goal-scorers’ goals, brilliant goals – there’s so much to speak about that is good about Lawrence Shankland.”

The fact that Shankland is a boyhood club Rangers supporter can only be an added bonus in the Gers’ quest to snap him up, and he could be such a potent addition to the attack after topping the Scottish Premiership scoring charts with 24 goals last season – six more than anyone else.

Brendan Rodgers reacts to Celtic display vs Hibs as pre-match instruction deliver

Celtic defeated Hibernian 3-1 at home on Sunday to extend their winning run at the beginning of the 2024–25 campaign.

As today’s centre forward, Daizen Maeda was brought in to replace the injured Kyogo Furuhashi, and he did not let anyone down with a first-half double that sent the Bhoys into the League Cup.

Shortly after the half, winger Nicolas Kuhn joined in to make sure there was no drama in the last moments.

Being a Celtics fan right now is a lot of fun. A sizable contingent showed up to support the team today, and they were pleased with what they saw

Naturally delighted, manager Brendan Rodgers shared his thoughts with BBC Radio Scotland after the game.

Commenting on Celtic’s victory over Hibs, Brendan Rodgers
The Bhoys’ manager remarked, “I felt we were very good.” We showed our hunger right away, which I thought made us great from the beginning of the game. We had stated prior to the game that our counter-pressing would be our playmaker, and it was. So many second and third balls were going to us.

The only true threat to us came from throw-ins. Guys that can toss it in, apply a little pressure, and get you to tense up are stationed on either side of the pitch. We handled that quite nicely. We did not reveal too much. Their header was excellent.

“The entire pace, velocity, and quality of the attacking phases of the game was outstanding.”

For the next two weeks, St Mirren and Rangers are now the teams to watch. Although it will undoubtedly be a trying and demanding time, every Celtics supporter is rooting for the squad to pass those trials with flying colours.

There is still more work to be done both on and off the pitch to satisfy fans, as the transfer window is drawing to a close.

In addition, there’s the minor issue of the Champions League draw on August 29 to anticipate.



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