The Scotsman

Rangers’ title charge fuels hopes of dining at top table

- Stephen Halliday Football writer

Steven Gerrard has spoken of his determinat­ion to ensure his players ‘don’t get ahead of themselves’ as Rangers close in on the Premiershi­p crown.

While Gerrard’s desire to stay rooted in the moment is understand­able, nothing the Rangers manager can do or say will prevent his club’s supporters from casting their minds forward to the celebratio­ns which would accompany a title triumph perhaps coveted more than any other.

After a decade spent largely in the doldrums, Rangers are charting a course which could lead them all the way back to the promised land of the Champions League group stage for the first time since the 2010-11 season.

Even though Gerrard may regard it as premature to start making projection­s about how his team could get there, the possibilit­ies are tantalisin­g for Rangers thanks to Scotland’s vastly improved Uefa coefficien­t ranking.

With two places in the Champions league qualifiers restored for the 2021-22 campaign, rangers would earn as hot at making it to the lucrative group phase even if they finish runners-up in the Premiershi­p this season.

But winning their domestic title, which increasing­ly appears a fait accompli with a 20-point lead over Celtic who have two games in hand, will provide a significan­t boost for Rangers’ prospects of Champions League progress.

They will enter the ‘champions path’ section of the qualifiers which is a notionally less hazardous route to the group stage, albeit the one on which Celtic have slipped up against Fer encvaros,cluj and aeka then sin their last three attempts.

Thanks to that enhanced coefficien­t, for which Rangers have made a major contributi­on with their admirably consistent Europa league forms inceg err a rd’ s appointmen­t in 2018, the Scottish champions will enter the qualifiers at a later stage next season. It means Rangers would be just two ties away from the group stage with their campaign kicking off in the third qualifying round.

While the likely identity of domestic league winners around Europe may fluctuate between now and May, it is already possible to form a reasonable assumption of who will stand between Rangers and a place in the group stage.

They would be one of 12 clubs in the ‘champions path’ third qualifying round where, as things stand, they would be one of the unseeded teams. The six seeded clubs, if current domestic league placings are maintained, are forecast to be Olympiacos, Dinamo Zagreb, Slavia Prague, Young Boys, Red Star Belgrade and Ludogorets.

While none of those six enjoy quite as healthy a lead as Rangersin their title races, they are all hot favourites to become champions in Greece, Croatia, Czech Republic, Switzerlan­d, Serbia and Bulgaria respective­ly.

But intriguing­ly for Rangers, currently projected to be the highest ranked of the six unseeded clubs, five of those seeded teams will be starting their campaigns earlier in the tournament. Dinamo Zagreb and ludo gorets begin in the first qualifying round, while olympia cos, Young Boys and Red Star Belgrade enter the fray in the second qualifying round.

It would therefore only require one of those five to slip up in the earlier rounds for rangers to be promoted to seeded status in the third qualifying round. forger ra rd’ s team, that could mean a tie against theoretica­lly less daunting opponents such as Maribor of Slovenia or Sheriff Tiraspol of Moldova. If Rangers do clear their first hurdle and reach the play-off round, they are all but certain to be unseeded. The degree of difficulty may rise significan­tly, with Red Bull Salzburg slated to be the top ranked club entering at that stage. But regardless of what the draw has in store, Rangers will go into the qualifiers buoyed by the renewed credibilit­y and sense of self-assurance they have garnered on the European stage under Gerrard’s guidance.

Having inherited a squad responsibl­e for the most humiliatin­g result in Rangers’ European history when eliminated from the Europa League in the first qualifying round by Luxembourg minnows Progres Niederkorn in 2017, Gerrard has brought back the shine to that tarnished continenta­l reputation.

So far, Rangers have lost just five of the 41 Europa League matches they have played during his tenure. In 11 qualifying ties, Gerrard, pictured inset, has yet to taste defeat in even a single leg-a trend which augurs well for the Champions League challenge ahead.

Reaching the group stage of the Europa League in each of his three seasons so far has not only restored Rangers’ prestige, it has played a major part in the financial rehabilita­tion of the club. In 2018-19, Europa League football accounted for £14.3 million of rangers’ turnover,while last season that figure rose to £20m.

As Rangers try to move to a financial model which does not see them rely on the ongoing largesse of investors such as chairman Douglas Park and vice-chairman John Bennett, reaching the group stage of the Champions league next season would be transforma­tive.

When celtic were last there, in 2017-18, they posted record revenue of £101.6m, of which just under £30m came from UEFA prize money alone.

Rangers have invested significan­t amounts in strengthen­ing a squad for which the confirmed wage bill last season was £29.7m and is believed to be closer to around £40m this term. The value of Gerrard’s squad has also increased exponentia­lly which will allow Rangers to improve their balance sheet with the sale of some players for considerab­le profit in the coming years.

But the most prized entry in their ledger would be the one that signifies they are back in the group stage of europe’ s elite club competitio­n.

 ??  ?? 0 Alfredo Morelos scores against Young Boys, one of the potential opponents for Rangers in next season's Champions League qualifiers
0 Alfredo Morelos scores against Young Boys, one of the potential opponents for Rangers in next season's Champions League qualifiers
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