The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

FINE EURO RUN SHOWS RANGERS’ POTENTIAL

-

Alastair Johnston believes Rangers’ Europa League run has thrown up questions about the club’s future in any structural shake-up of the game.

The Ibrox club and its supporters are still euphoric after the thrilling 3-1 win over RB Leipzig at Ibrox last Thursday night took them to their first European final in 14 years.

Former Gers chairman Johnston, now a nonexecuti­ve director, will be in Seville to see Giovanni van Bronckhors­t’s side take on another Bundesliga outfit – Eintracht Frankfurt – on May 18 and he believes the achievemen­t highlighte­d the club’s potential.

Johnston recalled the quick collapse of the bid to create a European Super League last April but insists the concept will come back under another guise and believes Rangers should be part of any conversati­ons about restructur­ing football.

The United Statesbase­d businessma­n said the Light Blues’ Europa League campaign leads to a bigger issue “in the context of where we are in the world of football today and where the world of football is going to go”.

He said: “If Rangers are going to proceed into bigger leagues there is going to be a real chance of that happening within the next 10 years because the football landscape in the next 10 years is going to be significan­tly changed.

“Foreign owners will begin to bear their influence, their money and their aggression to create a restructur­ing of the game.

“They are not paying all that money without there being some ambitions in sight. As a board we recognise that without the supporters’ desire and without them basically supporting us, no one is going anywhere fast.

“But we also have an obligation to recognise that all Rangers supporters don’t speak with the same voice. We have to walk a fine line.

“How we have kept score for the best part of 150 years is winning the Scottish league, in the main, and secondly, if we beat Celtic in the process.

“There are certainly some that will say – and they tend to be fans that live and work in and around the west of Scotland – it gives them great bragging rights at work on Monday morning.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom