The Scotsman

Insipid displays leave Aberdeen and Rangers in Celtic’s slipstream

- JOEL SKED ON FOOTBALL

On Saturday, Aberdeen captain Scott Mckenna sliced the ball high into the air behind him, setting in motion a comedic string of errors which put Motherwell 2-0 up at Hampden Park in the first Scottish Cup semi-final.

A little more than 24 hours later, Scotland internatio­nal and Rangers centre-back Russell Martin cushioned a Kieran Tierney cross into the path of Callum Mcgregor who put Celtic 2-0 ahead on their way to a 4-0 dismantlin­g of their Glasgow rivals.

Two snapshots from two different games. But each painted the same picture; Aberdeen and Rangers remain miles away from becoming realistic contenders for Celtic’s Ladbrokes Premiershi­p crown.

Celtic, with a landmark performanc­e and result, are one step closer to a double-treble, which is unpreceden­ted in Scottish football. And talk has already begun about a triple-treble.

At this point it is important to recognise Motherwell, who once again showed their progressio­n under Stephen Robinson. They have the ability, the stamina, the power and desire to match Celtic and win. At this moment the bigger picture will be of little interest to Well fans looking forward to their fifth trip to the national stadium this season.

The bigger picture, however, is not the brightest.

On 4 March, when the draw for the semi-final was made, Graeme Murty revealed that the Rangers dressing room greeted the pairing of his side with Celtic with cheers. Their confidence was understand­able, even if, with hindsight, it was misguided. With January recruits on board the club looked finally to be making steady progress in the top flight.

It led to some, including this writer, to not only talk up Murty as Ibrox manager for the coming seasons but also the prospect of Rangers as realistic contenders to stop Celtic’s pursuit of ten in a row. Within a week Rangers had given up the lead twice to lose at home to their tenman Glasgow rivals in the league, and then followed it up with a defeat by Kilmarnock and draw at Motherwell.

It was a case of two steps forward and one step back for this Rangers side. That was until Sunday.

At Hampden Murty’s gameplan unravelled in front of him and he seemed paralysed until he removed Andy Halliday with four minutes of the first half remaining. Making the change at such a time does not allow for any impact.

Aside from the tactical deficienci­es – both at Hampden and at Ibrox last month when Murty was schooled by Brendan Rodgers’ proactive changes – the way in which the team crumbled perhaps says more about his readiness for a job of such magnitude.

When the going gets tough can he rely on his players and inspire them to stand strong? To show the character, the personalit­y to work harder, run more, take pride in their work?

More often than not teams do that for good managers, ones which they respect. With their collective performanc­e, the reaction by Halliday and Daniel Candeias when being subbed, they showed their true feelings towards the man on the sidelines.

The players have to look in the mirror and the way they conducted themselves, during and after the match, but as Celtic waltzed through at will, Murty looking on helplessly, it was clear that they know he is not going to be around next season.

Which comes back to the decisions at board level at Ibrox, as it so often does.

The decisions made in the coming weeks and months are crucial. A major rebuilding job is required. It doesn’t need £100 million as former Celtic player Kris Commons suggested – just look what competent coaching has done at Kilmarnock. But it does require a manager.

That manager is unlikely to be Derek Mcinnes, even if Aberdeen fans would have been indifferen­t to their manager departing for their rivals as they trooped away from Hampden Park on Saturday.

The embarrassm­ent served up by Rangers was matched by the insipid nature of Aberdeen’s performanc­e. Much was made about the unavailabi­lity of Shay Logan, Kenny Mclean and Graeme Shinnie and the negative affect it would have on the team. The players appeared to buy into that narrative.

The loss of Jonny Hayes and Niall Mcginn last summer was always going to be pivotal to the Pittodrie side. They were being stripped of two players who were central to the club’s identity. Mcinnes looked to reshape the squad and seemed to do well with recruitmen­t, on paper at least.

The team’s evolution has not looked like materialis­ing at any point this season and, for the first time under Mcinnes, the Dons have simply stagnated, if not regressed. That was there for everyone to see against Motherwell – as it was in fixtures against Rangers and Celtic this se as on–beforeMc inn es’ criticismo­f his own recruitmen­t. weirdly, Aberdeen’ s best signing this season has been Kenny M clean on loan from Norwich City in January.

Like Rangers the day after, Aberdeen did not stand up to the Motherwell threat despite it being obvious how the Steelmen would play. Mcinnes made baffling errors in judgment, both tactically and in terms of personnel.

The team were met with boos at the end of the first half and conclusion of the match. It was something which drew criticism in some quarters with Dons fans being asked to remember where they were before Mcinnes. But on arrival he was inspiratio­nal and raised expectatio­ns. He will therefore understand he has to face the consequenc­es when the team underperfo­rms.

Aberdeen are a step ahead of Rangers in that they have a competent manager. Now, rather than steady squad developmen­t, there is a sense that both the squad and playing philosophy require rebuilding.

This was not a good weekend for the future of the Premiershi­p title race. Despite all the talk of Celtic’s drop from last season’s lofty standards, they remain in a commanding position over two rivals who have a big summer ahead.

“This was not a good weekend for the future of the Premiershi­p title race. Despite all the talk of Celtic’s drop from last season’s lofty standards, they remain in a commanding position over two rivals who have a big summer ahead”

 ??  ?? 0 Don’t look now: Aberdeen’s Stevie May and Rangers’ Graham Dorrans cut frustrated figures at Hampden Park.
0 Don’t look now: Aberdeen’s Stevie May and Rangers’ Graham Dorrans cut frustrated figures at Hampden Park.
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