How Steven Gerrard’s Rangers Dreams Fell Apart

ADVERTISE HERE

ADVERTISE HERE

Under the Liverpool legend, Rangers seemed well placed to end Celtic’s grip on Scottish football, but the wheels have come off

Steven Gerrard will lead his Rangers side into battle with Bayer Leverkusen in the last 16 of the Europa League on Thursday, but he does so as a manager under pressure.

While the Gers have excelled on the continent, notably seeing off Portuguese sides Porto and Braga to extend their European campaign as far as they could realistically have hoped when they kicked off against St Josephs in Gibraltar on July 9, their quest to win their first domestic silverware since 2011 has fallen embarrassingly flat.

A 1-0 Scottish Cup loss away to Hearts, who sit bottom of the
Scottish Premiership with just 22 points from 28 games, last weekend
ended those aspirations, with Oliver Brozovic’s 58th-minute strike
leading Gerrard to admit that he was questioning his very future at
Ibrox.

“I’m very disappointed. It’s the lowest I’ve felt since I came into the job by a long way,” he confessed. 

“On Wednesday night I was the proudest man in Europe because my players were outstanding.

“Everything we’ve worked on for two years, I could see it on the sidelines. I was proud as punch, it was incredible.

“But today for 90 minutes, I didn’t recognise anything. So I’m feeling really low.

“Two seasons without a trophy isn’t good enough. It’s not what I’m about.”

Just 11 weeks after committing himself to a new contract in Glasgow, he admitted he had some “serious thinking” to do after the Scottish Cup exit, which was the culmination of a month of indifferent league form that saw points spilled to Aberdeen, Kilmarnock and St Johnstone, thereby virtually ceding the league to Celtic.

Optimists pointed out that the Gers’ tally of 64 points was superior
to that which Celtic had attained at the same stage last season, but the
harsh truth was that their rivals were 12 points ahead of them this
term, albeit with a game extra played.

And having issued a rallying cry at Tynecastle that should have seen his team respond in positive fashion in a home league match against second-from-bottom Hamilton, the response was perhaps their most embarrassing loss of the season.

Rangers
might have boasted 31 shots and 69 per cent of possession, but the only
goal of the game was scored by David Moyo 11 minutes into the second
half. It was the fifth time in eight league games that they failed to
win – more than Celtic all season.

“With all due respect to Hamilton, that is not an acceptable result
at this club. I’m going to take responsibility for that. I hear the
fans, I feel them, no one is hurting as much as myself and the players,”
Gerrard said ahead of a Sunday trip to Ross County 

“So we certainly respect the reaction and will do everything we can
to make them feel better as quick as we can. It’s about actions now,
rather than words.”

The bleeding must be stopped in Dingwall on Sunday, even if the domestic damage has already been done. 

Only pride is available now in Scotland before May, yet it must be restored or else it will take something sensational in the Europa League to ensure Gerrard’s long-term future at the club.

What only three months ago looked like a dream partnership is slowly morphing into a nightmare. 

ADVERTISE HERE

CLICK HERE TO COMMENT ON THIS POST

Do you find Naijafinix Blog Useful??

Click Here for Feedback and 5-Star Rating!



Be the first to comment

Share your thoughts

Your email address will not be published.