The Scotsman

Rangers insist Gilmour deal is best they could have done

Chelsea to pay initial £500,000 for young midfielder

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

Rangers believe they have secured the best deal possible for Billy Gilmour after admitting defeat in their bid to keep the highly-regarded teenage playmaker at Ibrox.

Gilmour’s move to English Premier League championse­lect Chelsea was confirmed yesterday. He will officially join the London club’s academy as a full-time profession­al when he celebrates his 16th birthday on 11 June.

It is understood Rangers will receive an initial fee of £500,000 for Gilmour, with potential further payments agreed which are dependent on the Ayrshire prodigy’s subsequent progress through the ranks at Chelsea.

Rangers made strenuous efforts to persuade Gilmour to commit himself to a profession­al contract at Ibrox, with both current manager Pedro Caixinha and predecesso­r Mark Warburton making personal appeals to his parents.

However, even the possibilit­y of first-team football at Rangers as soon as next season was not enough to persuade Gilmour or his family.

Rangers managing director Stewart Robertson recently revealed a fee had been agreed in principle with Chelsea to ensure they did not lose Gilmour for a nominal amount on the expiry of his academy contract this summer.

In a statement confirming Gilmour’s departure, Rangers expressed their satisfacti­on at the financial terms secured.

“The club’s preference would have been for Billy to stay but when he made clear his desire to move to the Premier League it was important that we maximised the commercial value for him,” it read. “We believe we have done this.

“The agreement will provide Rangers with a significan­t sum for a young player who has yet to play first-team football, and further significan­t amounts could be due. We are pleased with this outcome and believe this deal represents good value for Rangers. Everyone at Rangers wishes Billy well for his future.”

Islam Feruz, a previous hotly-tipped youngster who made the switch from Glasgow to Chelsea has seen his career stagnate. After fleeing Africa to London, the Somalia-born youngster arrived in Scotland with his asylum-seeking family and joined Celtic aged ten.

Six years later, the forward moved to Chelsea in a lucrative deal and has since had a series of short-term loan deals at numerous clubs, including Hibs. He moved to Easter Road in September 2015 but his season-long loan was cut short. He failed to score from six appearance­s from the bench.

Now 21, he was on loan at Swindon Town this season but did not score in four appearance­s.

At the other end of the player age scale at Rangers, veteran defender Clint Hill is poised to leave the club at the end of the season. The 38-year-old has performed admirably since joining on a one-year deal last summer but it is understood Caixinha has informed him he will not be offered a new contract.

Rangers have wrapped up new deals for three of their most promising academy players. Defender Aidan Wilson, 18, has signed a new contract until 2019 while 17-year-olds Jack Thomson, a midfielder, and striker Zak Rudden have agreed extensions until 2020.

‘DIFFICULT TO DEAL WITH’ “I haven’t spoken to Scott [Sinclair] about what happened but I’m sure he’s upset about it. It’s a difficult thing to deal with and I hopeheisok­ay”

WES FODERINGHA­M

Wes Foderingha­m confronted racism head on when it happened to him for the first and so far only time in a football stadium five years ago, an incident which prompted him to commit himself as a campaigner to try to eradicate it from the game.

The Rangers goalkeeper has now revealed his “disgust” when he found out it had taken place behind his back at Ibrox just over a week ago.

Foderingha­m only learned about the monkey gestures directed at Celtic winger Scott Sinclair in the aftermath of the Old Firm Premiershi­p fixture. The two men involved have already been handed indefinite bans by Rangers, while club sources yesterday confirmed similar action has been taken against two season-ticket holders who loaned the offenders their tickets on the day. As an ambassador for the Kick It Out organisati­on, founded in 1993 to tackle racism and discrimina­tion in football, Foderingha­m was pleased to see his own club enforce such swift measures.

“I didn’t know about it until after the game and found out through social media and the rest of it,” he said. “I was disgusted and thought it was terrible. It’s one or two fans who have ruined the atmosphere. They have ruined the game and it’s the one or two who have tarnished the fans. The majority of the Rangers fans don’t condone it. Rangers, as a club, don’t condone it and neither do the players. The individual­s have been dealt with by the club and, hopefully, it’s just an isolated situation.

“It’s surprising to see it in this day and age but it’s been dealt with accordingl­y and what we don’t want to happen is for it to reflect on Rangers in any way shape or form. The club does a lot of work in the community to try to raise awareness through the Follow With Pride initiative.

“I haven’t spoken to Scott about what happened but I’m sure he’s upset about it. It’s a difficult thing to deal with and I hope he is okay. It happened behind my goal but, if there is a bit of hope, it’s that it’s an isolated incident. It’s one or two fans who’ve maybe had too much to drink and gone a step too far but we need to deal with it and the club has dealt with it. It’s a positive that the club acted so quickly and taken the action that they did. You don’t want to see this type of thing in sport or society. The club have done the correct thing by dealing with it quickly.

“The first time I ever experience­d racism personally was after I had

played a game for Swindon at Morecambe in 2012. It was after the game, I was walking back to the coach and this lad, who was no more than 16, shouted ‘Go back to your own country’. I was born in England, in London. I was angry but I didn’t act angry towards him. I didn’t approach him in a confrontat­ional manner. I was a little bit shocked at the time and unsure how to handle it.

“I just asked him what he was thinking and he couldn’t give me an answer. It was difficult to deal with it at the time and, until something like that happens to you, I don’t think you can know how you will react. I reported what happened to the groundstaf­f and the coaching set-up. But if something did happen to him beyond that, I didn’t hear about it.”

Foderingha­m was speaking at Ibrox where he helped former Charlton, Aston Villa and Crystal Palace midfielder Paul Mortimer, now Kick It Out’s Profession­al Players’ Engagement Manager, deliver an anti-discrimina­tion workshop to pupils from St Saviour’s Primary School in Govan.

“About six to eight months after the incident at Morecambe I was approached by Paul who asked me if I wanted to come on board and I was delighted to,” said Foderingha­m. “We go and visit schools and football clubs to try to raise awareness and it’s been brilliant. That day at Morecambe was the only time I have personally experience­d racism on a football pitch and, since I’ve moved up to Scotland, the fans have been brilliant. It’s about tackling the minds of the younger generation, to try to educate them on equality both within sport and within society as well. It’s something which is working well.”

Asked what he would say to the offenders who made the gestures at Sinclair, Foderingha­m replied: “I’d ask them what they were thinking. I’m sure they couldn’t even tell

you what they were thinking. Without raising awareness and speaking about it openly, you are never going to get an answer. There have been massive strides and improvemen­ts made in the last 50 years and I hope that continues. I wouldn’t say it is a massive problem, especially up here in Scotland. Since I have been here, that is the only situation I have seen. But you can see the impact it has. All it takes is one fan. Growing up in London, I lived in a multi-cultural city and a multi-cultural environmen­t so I didn’t have any racism thrown my way. In football, great strides have been made to get rid of it and hopefully that continues.”

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 ?? PICTURE: ROB CASEY/SNS ?? 0 Billy Gilmour in action for Rangers under-17s in their 2-1 win over Celtic in the Glasgow Cup final.
PICTURE: ROB CASEY/SNS 0 Billy Gilmour in action for Rangers under-17s in their 2-1 win over Celtic in the Glasgow Cup final.
 ??  ?? 0 1, Wes Foderingha­m and Paul Mortimer with pupils of St Saviours Primary School, where Kick it Out held an anti-discrimina­tion workshop yesterday 2, Foderingha­m is an ambassador for Kick It Out 3&4, Scott Sinclair parades with a Love Celtic Hate...
0 1, Wes Foderingha­m and Paul Mortimer with pupils of St Saviours Primary School, where Kick it Out held an anti-discrimina­tion workshop yesterday 2, Foderingha­m is an ambassador for Kick It Out 3&4, Scott Sinclair parades with a Love Celtic Hate...

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