The Scotsman

Rangers hit the front in title race as fans taunt Celtic with ‘we shall not be moved’ message

- Mark Atkinson at Mcdiarmid Park

Advantage Rangers. For the first time in two years, the Ibrox club are in command of the Premiershi­p title race, overtaking defending champions Celtic with a 3-0 victory over St Johnstone in Perth.

Capitalisi­ngfullyonc­eltic’s1-1 draw at home to Kilmarnock on Saturday, Rangers notably opened up a two-point gap at the summit. When Michael Beale was sacked as manager back in September, Celtic led Rangers by seven points, but under the stewardshi­p of the increasing­ly impressive Philippe Clement, they have chipped away at Celtic’s lead and preyed on their Old Firm rivals’ failings under Brendan Rodgers.

While there will now be an understand­able panic across the Glasgow divide, this feels likeatitle­racewithmo­retwists to come. Neither Rangers or Celtic are especially swashbuckl­ing and don’t blow teams away. But what is becoming apparent is that Rangers know how to churn out wins under the Belgian. Only Celtic have beaten them under his watch. This victory over St Johnstone was a fine example of such a trait. They have prevailed in all nine of their matches since losing the last derby at the end of 2023.

A win did not seem immediatel­y obvious in sunny Perth against a limited St Johnstone team. A truly soporific first 35 minutes would be the perfect cure for insomnia as a sleepy Mcdiarmid Park bore witness to one of the poorest starts to a Premiershi­p match this season on a bobbly, fiery pitch that did not help the 22 players on it. St Johnstone maintained their discipline until the 37th minute, when Ryan Mcgowan did not clear his lines properly at the edge of the box. Mohamed Diomande, who was a tidy and influentia­l presence on his maiden league start, took aim and leathered the ball home from 20 yards. the rangers fans behind the goal exploded. “We shall not be moved,” they sang.

Saints had proved tooth less in an attacking sense and rangers emerged from the break looking for a killer second goal. The clinching moment came on 78 minutes via the penalty spot. Dujon Sterling charged down

a Graham Carey clearance and raced on to the loose ball in the box. Andy Considine came charging to tackle him but was too late, felling the wing er. how referee Matthew Macdermid and his nearside assistant Ross Macleod did not give it in real time, only they will know. This is why VAR is helpful, as obvious a penalty you will see all weekend. Macdermid was summoned to the touchline screen and did not take long to change his mind. James Ta vernierste­pped up and while dim it ar Mitov guessed correctly, the spot-kick was impeccable.

A less obvious penalty followedon 87 minutes. tom lawrence’ s shots truck the flailing, trailing arm of Luke Robinson and Macdermid again visited the VAR monitor before pointing to the spot. Tavernier once again converted to score his 120th goal in Rangers colours.

A thunderous rendition of “we shall not be moved” ensued, followed by a pointed message to Celtic from the now jubilant Rangers fans. “We’re going to win the league,” they cried. With 12 games remaining, it’s now in their hands.

What is apparent is that Rangers know how to churn out wins under the Belgian

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 ?? ?? James Tavernier, right, scores from the spot to make it 3-0 to Rangers. Above, Mohamed Diomande celebrates his opener
James Tavernier, right, scores from the spot to make it 3-0 to Rangers. Above, Mohamed Diomande celebrates his opener
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