The Scotsman

Killie boss rails against anti-catholic abuse at Ibrox

● ‘I thank Chelsea for taking me away from this’ says Rugby Park boss

- By ANDREW SMITH at Ibrox

Steve Clarke issued a scathing denunciati­on of “dark ages west of Scotland” sectariani­sm after the Kilmarnock manager had chants of “sad Fenian bastard” directed at him towards the end of his team’s 5-0 Scottish Cup fifth round replay defeat by Rangers at Ibrox last night.

Initially rounding on officials for their failure to award his team a second-minute penalty before a bizarre 26th-minute red card was shown to Killie goalkeeper Daniel Bachmann on an evening when Alfredo Morelos scored four, Clarke then boiled over when asked about the abuse meted out to him by the home support.

He was at once scathing, seething and sneering about the anti-catholic abuse that he had suffered and the attitudes which still prevail in a home country he left in his early 20s when he moved as a player from St Mirren to Chelsea.

“It’s nice being back in the west of Scotland – really nice,” he said sarcastica­lly, before revealing he had been sounded out about becoming Rangers manager followed the sacking of Pedro Caixinha in October 2017.

“When I was approached by Rangers about taking over the job here I was assured, ‘nah, we didn’t have that in the west of Scotland anymore and it had gone’. Hahaha,” Clarke said. “They can call me a bastard or wanker but to call me a Fenian bastard? Come on. We’re living in the dark ages.

They’re not allowed to call my assistant [Alex Dyer] a black B but they can call me a Fenian bastard. Is that correct? What are we doing in Scotland?

“I wake up every morning and I thank Chelsea for taking me away from the west. My children have nothing to do this with this, thankfully. My children and grandchild­ren. It’s fantastic to be back in Scotland.”

Earlier in his conference, Clarke had laid waste to the performanc­es of referee Alan Muir and his assistant Drew Kirkland, the former rejecting penalty calls when Eamonn Brophy was grabbed back by Joe Worrall in the second minute. The referee then showed a straight red to Bachmann after he inadverten­tly caught Glen Kamara as he thrust his arms upwards in preparatio­n for a corner.

“Story of the match,” Clarke said. “If the penalty had been given in the first two minutes it would have been different. The red card is a joke. It’s a joke. If that’s the standards we might as well go home. It’s every week, every other week.

“You’ll probably write Morelos four goals but the officials decided the game. It’s embarrassi­ng. The goalie just lifted his arms. Every goalie does it every week. It’s embarrassi­ng. I’m talking in general. Bad decisions. All we talk about is our refs.”

Another Scottish football showpiece that ended up all about referees and Alfredo Morelos. In this week of all weeks. Except that in Rangers’ emphatic Scottish Cup fifth-round replay success at home to Kilmarnock that sets up a quarter-final against Aberdeen, the Colombian and officialdo­m required to be set apart. A monumental distance.

Morelos, the temperamen­tal 22-year-old whose alchemic properties for Steven Gerrard’s side continue to prove utterly remarkable, showed the very best of himself courtesy of a four-goal haul that only was to be lauded to the heavens. In contrast, referee Alan Muir, in concert with his assistant Drew Kirkland, produced hellish decisions that deserve to be criticised.

Inside the first six minutes we had our game’s headline hoggers ensure they would continue to hog the headlines. And on the night they ensured the outcome was determined when Steve Clarke’s side were reduced to ten men after keeper Daniel Bachmann was sent off with his team a goal down and centre-back Alex Bruce about to be withdrawn through injury.

The contest was played against the backdrop of highlevel meetings and moves to bring in referees from outside the country to take the heat off the indigenous, inveterate mistake-makers adjudicati­ng on our game. Muir, then, would have hoped to have an evening where he would not come under the spotlight that has been wilting for some of his colleagues. However, he denied himself that right as early as the second minute when Eamonn Brophy was taken down by Joe Worrall in the box only for the referee to wave aside furious claims for a penalty from the Kilmarnock attacker.

It wasn’t certain what Muir thought he saw, or what was communicat­ed to him by Kirkland, when he made the second crucial decision on the night in dismissing visiting keeper Bachmann for felling Glen Kamara in the box as Rangers prepared to take a corner. Television replays seemed to show the Austrian inadverten­tly catching the midfielder with little force after he had thrust his hands up as keepers do in readying themselves for a corner. Kamara crumpled as if he had been bazooka’d and, with the crowd mystified as to what was going on, he was still there as Muir showed a disbelievi­ng Bachmann the red card.

Such judgment calls did a disservice to the efforts of More lo son the night. The Colombian tends to prove football’ s answer to a PT Barnum creation owing to his ability to claim centre stage and demand rapt attention. But his goals won’t be given the sole billing they deserved from last night’s Ibrox entertainm­ent. The striker has bustle and burrowing powers, not to mention brilliant anticipati­on, and a thunderous finish. All these attributes were on display throughout the night, which, in a playing sense, belonged to him from the moment he claimed a sixth minute opener to set this tie on the way to being one that sustains Rangers’ season. Gerrard had acknowledg­ed that the only realistic prospect of a trophy from the season for his team rests with this competitio­n following the insipid efforts that brought a scoreless draw against St Johnstone at Ibrox on Saturday that leaves them eight points adrift of Celtic in the Premiershi­p. The Rangers manager acknowledg­ed the lack of a cutting edge, and player capable of conjuring up matchwinni­ng moments, when his team were deprived of Morelos, as they were at the weekend through suspension.

And within six minutes that one-man strikeforc­e was showing what he can offer when he was on hand to turn over a Daniel Candeias cross from the right from all of one yard. It seemed simple, but Morelos makes goalscorin­g

appear deceptivel­y so. It was in the 45th minute that he netted a not dissimilar second. Candeias’ ball in was this time whipped head height, Morelos despatchin­g the ball into the net from all of two yards.

His strength and appetite for destructiv­e scoring moments made him a figure a bedraggled Kilmarnock – who seemed resigned to their fate when Bachmann departed – just couldn’t quell.

The second half of the Morelos show resumed a minute after substitute Andy Halliday, pictured inset, had produced a crisp strike for Rangers’ third in the 77th minute, the player hardly on the field before he played a one-two with Ryan Kent before unleashing a whizzing drive.

Morelos ensured the focus switched to him again in an instant when he fashioned a thumping hat-trick strike. Candeias sent him through and the forward did the rest, giving welly to a effort that flashed past Jamie Macdonald at his near post. His final salvo of the night, which took his tally for the season to 27, was the result of hapless defending that he punished with clinical finishing when he was able to intercept a pass on the edge of the area before lashing a low effort into the far corner. The only thing capable of stopping Morelos seems to be himself, with another spell on the sidelines to follow this weekend as his team take on Hamilton, which will be the final game of his threematch ban.

RANGERS: Foderingha­m, Tavernier, Goldson, Worrall, Barisic (Halliday 70), Jack, Candeias, kamara (Lafferty 76), Arfield (Davis 69), Kent, Morelos. Subs not used: Firth, Defoe, Katic, Coulibaly. KILMARNOCK: Bachmann, O’donnell, Bruce (Tshibola 27), Scott Boyd, Taylor, mulumbu, Burke, Power, Dicker, Mcaleny (Macdonald 26), Brophy (Ndjoli 75). Subs not used: Mckenzie, Kris Boyd, Jones, Millen.

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 ??  ?? 0 Kilmarnock manager Steve Clarke said he was thankful his children did not have to grow up in the west of Scotland.
0 Kilmarnock manager Steve Clarke said he was thankful his children did not have to grow up in the west of Scotland.
 ??  ?? 2 Alfredo Morelos thumps home his hattrick strike to make it 4-0 to Rangers on a night where the Colombian was unstoppabl­e.
2 Alfredo Morelos thumps home his hattrick strike to make it 4-0 to Rangers on a night where the Colombian was unstoppabl­e.
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