The Herald - Herald Sport

Mistrust and suspicion will linger long past lockdown

- AND ANOTHER THING

RANGERS make Glasgow? Well, they certainly make it interestin­g. Steven Gerrard sent out a rallying call to get the season ticket money coming in this week, an act of faith that has already been embraced in Leith, where Hibs have sold 5000 season tickets for the new campaign, despite no-one having the foggiest idea when or how it will be played.

It is wishful thinking to contemplat­e a time when the focus returns to whatever dramas are played out on the park rather than in video conference calls.

But the circus that has surrounded Scottish football since the pause button was hit in the middle of March has given way to a pantomime, complete with its own cast of heroes and villains.

And the noise it has generated will echo long after the focus on the current crisis has moved on.

Any of us who have a social media account will have first-hand experience of how ridiculous­ly unsavoury things can get when there is a difference of opinion voiced in the virtual stratosphe­re.

So much is boiled down to tribal allegiance­s rather than an ability to appreciate the bigger picture.

So these past few weeks, while so many of the headlines have revolved around a Rangers dossier that apparently contains evidence of wrongdoing with regards to the SPFL’s April vote, the bottom line is that it is hard to shake the feeling that last week’s Deloitte investigat­ion left the impression of a large tub of whitewash being tipped out at Hampden.

Until anyone knows what Rangers’ evidence consists of, it is impossible to make a call on whether there ought to be an independen­t investigat­ion.

If the accusation­s are deemed valid then a fit and proper look at what exactly happened on the evening of April 10 is the only genuine course of action that can be taken.

If the evidence is flimsy and scant and has been built up to be more substantia­l than it actually is, then Rangers have to accept the consequenc­es of that, just as Neil Doncaster will have to accept it should it turn out that the Ibrox club have not overplayed their hand.

But until anyone knows what that amounts to, it is an impossible call to make with conclusion­s largely drawn along which club colours one sports. Which is how we got to this position.

The cynics among us will conclude that Rangers’ insistence in the first place that the league was not called as it currently stands was a convenient deflection from a proper analysis of what has transpired at the club since January.

A team that looked capable of taking the title to the wire collapsed following the winter break. Gerrard’s side went out of the Scottish Cup to Hearts to realistica­lly end their chances of winning any silverware this season; at the press conference before kick-off, Gerrard himself had acknowledg­ed that the game was the last opportunit­y to end the season with a trophy.

By the time the season went into lockdown, Rangers were 13 points behind Celtic with a game in hand and two meeting between the teams still to be played. It is worth noting that been a lack of visibility and accountabi­lity from Doncaster and Murdoch MacLennan. The latter has held his chairman role for the last three years but has been rendered mute by an unwillingn­ess to front up for even one media interview.

No-one has a clue when it will be safe to play football again but the strong likelihood is that it won’t be any time soon. Finding an agreeable path out of the current situation with a view to restoring some semblance of normality is incumbent on all clubs at the minute.

In any case, whenever the evidence that Rangers have is made public then the mud that sticks may owe more to a question of incompeten­ce rather than one of corruption.

SCOTLAND isn’t the only place where the fall out from the coronaviru­s has started to get messy.

Over in France, the pot is slowly starting to boil after the French prime minister, Edouard Philippe, announced that team sports are banned in all form until September.

As such, the Ligue 1 teams had the wind taken abruptly from their sails; they had been looking at an early May return to training. Instead, PSG were declared champions this week and Toulouse relegated.

The latter appear to have accepted their fate with quiet dignity but Lyon, who will finish the season in seventh place, are contesting the call since their placing means they lose out on a European place – and the money that comes with it.

The headache of the legal action they are threatenin­g is exacerbate­d by the fact that Canal +, the main broadcaste­r in the country, are also looking now at holding money back since the season was called before it could be completed.

 ??  ?? Graffiti in Glasgow during the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic
Graffiti in Glasgow during the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic
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