The Scotsman

‘Bullying’ dossier is delayed

● Rangers’ allegation­s against Doncaster now set to be revealed to clubs on Thursday

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

Rangers are now poised to circulate their “dossier of evidence” against SPFL executives to the league’s other 41 member clubs on Thursday.

Stewart robertson, theibr ox club’s managing director, told his Premiershi­p counterpar­ts during a conference call hosted by Aberdeen chairman Dave Cormack last Friday that the material would be shared with them this week ahead of the EGM on 12 May seeking an independen­t inquiry into last month’s contentiou­s vote on ending the 2019-20 season amid the Covid-19 crisis.

It was initially expected that Rangers’ evidence would be released today but it is understood that the timeline has been pushed back 48 hours.

Rangers’ legal advisors have been finalising the documentat­ion of evidence, which they claim to have received from a whistleblo­wer.

The Ibrox club has described it as “alarming” and firmly believe it provides proof of a “lack of fair play” relating to how the ballot on the season-ending resolution was conducted.

The SPFL have denied accusation­s of “bullying and coercion” in the lead-up to the vote, in which the resolution was passed only after Dundee retracted an initial No vote and later submitted a decisive Yes return.

Rangers called for the suspension of SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster, pictured, and legal counsel Rod Mckenzie while an independen­t investigat­ion took place. But Doncaster last week conducted a series of media interviews in which he robustly defended the behaviour of himself and his staff at the SPFL and insisted they would have “nothing to fear” from an independen­t investigat­ion.

The SPFL board has urged clubs to vote against it, claiming it will be costly and timeconsum­ing. They commission­ed an internal probe by auditors Deloitte into the chronology of Dundee’s vote, finding no evidence of misconduct. But Rangers slammed the “narrow scope” of that inquiry and, backed by Hearts and Stranraer, succeeded in calling next week’s EGM of all 42 clubs.

For the resolution to pass and an independen­t investigat­ion to be ordered, it will require the support of 75 per cent of Premiershi­p clubs, 75 per cent of Championsh­ip clubs and 75 per cent of the League 1 and 2 clubs combined.

The SPFL board already has the authority to call time on this season’s Premiershi­p, as it has done in the lower three divisions, and decide the final placings on a points-per-game basis when football was suspended in March. In those circumstan­ces, Celtic would be awarded a ninth consecutiv­e league title and Hearts would be relegated.

But while the prospect of completing the top-flight campaign on the pitch appears increasing­ly remote, they are unlikely to make that decision until the full extent and nature of Rangers’ allegation­s come to light.

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