The Scotsman

Courteous and classy, Wilkins put Rangers on the road to nine-in-a-row

● £250k buy from PSG is remembered with great admiration by Ibrox support

-

Ray Wilkins may only have spent a relatively brief period of his long and illustriou­s career in Scotland but he left a lasting impression nonetheles­s.

A common theme of the flood of tributes paid to the former England midfielder following his untimely death at the age of 61 has been a recognitio­n of his ability to positively touch the lives of all who encountere­d him.

That was certainly true of the two years he spent as a Rangers player. Among the supporters of the Ibrox club who saw his contributi­on in 96 appearance­s from 1987 to 1989, he is remembered with a fondness and admiration normally only extended to those who stick around much longer.

When Wilkins arrived in Glasgow in November 1987, Rangers fans had become accustomed to the recruitmen­t of high-profile English stars since the appointmen­t of Graeme Souness as manager the previous year.

Even so, it remained a startling capture, not to mention a bargain buy. Rangers paid just £250,000 to prise Wilkins away from Paris Saint Germain where he had spent an unfulfilli­ng four months after a £1.5 million move from AC Milan.

The personal influence of Souness, who had got to know Wilkins well when they both played in Serie A, persuaded the then 31-year-old former Chelsea and Manchester United man to make Scotland the latest chapter in his footballin­g travelogue.

It would prove to be a richly rewarding career choice for Wilkins, albeit only after a difficult start. He joined Rangers in the midst of a 1987-88 season which saw them struggling to emulate the success they had enjoyed in Souness’ first campaign at the helm.

A Celtic side revitalise­d and inspired by the return of Billy Mcneill as manager claimed a league and Scottish Cup double in their centenary year, posing serious questions of Rangers’ ambitions for a sustained spell of dominance under Souness.

The emphatic response they delivered in 1988-89 owed much to the influence of Wilkins. The last of his 84 caps was already behind him but he showcased rich qualities which made a nonsense of so many preconcept­ions of him as an instinctiv­ely negative player, an image fuelled earlier in his career when former Manchester United boss Ron Atkinson labelled him “The Crab” for his use of sideways passes.

The reality for those fortunate enough to witness Wilkins in the flesh was a finely tuned football brain which operated on the basic premise that if you didn’t lose the ball, you were more than likely to win the match.

Wilkins had a grace under pressure in possession which shone even amidst the often frenetic nature of Scottish football. His range and choice of passing were immaculate, often penetratin­g and regularly providing assists for the front pairing of Ally Mccoist and Kevin Drinkell as Rangers regained the title comfortabl­y in what proved to be Wilkins’ only full season with the club. Richard Gough was named Player of the Year that season, but Wilkins ran him close.

He may have been the other side of 30, but Wilkins was as fit and durable as anyone in the Rangers squad at the time. He made 45 appearanc-

0 Ray Wilkins, who has died at the age of 61, made 96 appearance­s for Rangers between 1987 and 1989.

0 In an illustriou­s career, Wilkins also starred for Chelsea, Manchester United and, when he was 40, Hibs. es in the 88-89 campaign, scoring three goals which included a stunning volley in a 5-1 win over Celtic early in the season which set a marker for what was to follow.

It was the first title success of Rangers’ nine-in-a-row era but Wilkins only stayed at the club for the first four months of the following season. He played enough games to earn another championsh­ip medal, but his family yearning for a return to London saw him move to QPR.

His final appearance for Rangers, a 4-0 win over Dunfermlin­e at Ibrox at the end of November 1989, saw Wilkins receive a thunderous and rapturous standing ovation from all four stands as he left the pitch, bringing him to tears.

It would not be the end of his story in Scottish football, of course. On the very day of his 40th birthday in September 1996, Wilkins made his debut for Hibs in a 1-0 win over Raith Rovers at Easter Road.

He played under three managers in just over three months at the increasing­ly unsettled club – Alex Miller, Jocky Scott and Jim Duffy – before heading back south again to Millwall.

If his spell at Hibs was underwhelm­ing on the pitch, Wilkins nonetheles­s earned the affection of anyone who made his acquaintan­ce, just as he had while at Rangers. For those of us in the media fortunatee­noughtohav­edealings with him, he was unfailingl­y courteous and endlessly helpful.

His former Rangers teammate Ally Mccoist perhaps summed Wilkins up best of all yesterday when the numbing news of his death came through. “He was a fantastic footballer,” said Mccoist, “but more importantl­y a far greater human being.” Shelley Kerr chose Aberdonian­s Rachel Corsie and Kim Little as her captain and vice-captain when she replaced Anna Signeul as Scotland head coach after Euro 2017, yet tonight’s game against Switzerlan­d is expected to be the first time they have played together in her side.

It couldn’t be more timely, because the 2019 World Cup qualifier in Schaffhaus­en is easily the most meaningful game since Kerr took up the reins. Her record since September is five wins, a draw and just one loss – but although these included Group 2 wins over Belarus and Albania, it is the games against Switzerlan­d and, to a lesser extent Poland, which will decide which nation qualifies for next summer’s finals in France.

Little hasn’t been in a Scotland squad since last March, having suffered a training ground ACL rupture at Arsenal. She returned to club football last month, and Kerr has indicatedt­hatshewill­start at the Stadion Lipo tonight.

“We’ve got a massive player who has been missing for some time,” the head coach said. “She is 100 per cent fit and raring to go.”

Central defender Corsie has had lesser knee injury issues and missed the friendlies against Norway and Russia in January. She is now fully restored and also has a new club having joined Utah Royals of the American National Women’s Soccer League.

“I didn’t know too much about Salt Lake City other than the Winter Olympics were there in 2002,” she admitted. “The week I flew out there was about three feet of snow, and then in the summer I think it’s like the desert. It’s extreme.”

Corsie says Little’s return to the squad has already boosted morale. “She makes an impact just being in training, lifting the standards of everybody,” the captain pointed out.

Switzerlan­d, who are the top seeds, have won all four group games and are six points ahead of second seeds Scotland but have played two games more. Kerr’s side could go top if they win tonight and again in Tuesday’s home game against Poland.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom