The Scotsman

Dundee postponeme­nt gave squad a chance to bond, reveals Souttar

- Graeme Macpherson

Scottish football discourse is rarely burdened with a sense of perspectiv­e. The volume of words spoken and written about Dundee’s soggy surface and the inconvenie­nce caused to Rangers in their pursuit of a domestic treble by the midweek postponeme­nt has steadily risen from a trickle to a torrent.

Never before has the very serious topic of climate change been referenced in such glib fashion.

John Souttar certainly has no desire to add to this litany of first-world problems. The Rangers defender has endured enough real-life hardship to be able to distinguis­h between a crisis and a drama. Being holed up in a five-star St Andrews hotel awaiting news of a pitch inspection is an inconvenie­nce but, in the bigger picture, hardly troubling.

Instead, Souttar saw it as a chance to spend some unexpected additional time bonding with his teammates ahead of tomorrow’s next challenge away to Ross County.

“It’s not like we were going up there and staying in a prison,” he reasoned. “We were in a very nice hotel so I’m not going to complain about going up there and spending a day with the boys.

“We’re a close-knit group so it’s not like we went up there and spent the time on our own with everyone raging with the game being called off. We’re all close so we went up there and had a good time. It’s a way of bonding as well.

“Everyone does different things on away trips. A few of us go for coffees, a few play cards, others will be on the

Playstatio­n. It’s good. When you go away to hotels all the staff and all the boys are together. It brings everyone together. And to win things I think that’s important.

“That’s something we can take away from the stay out there. We wouldn’t have worked on the Ross County game until Thursday anyway. We could sit here and be negative about everything but I prefer to be positive and focus on that.”

Souttar has plenty to be positive about. This has been a restorativ­e season in terms of both form and fitness, one that could yet conclude with the 27-year-old travelling to the European Championsh­ips with Scotland.

He reveals himself to be quietly satisfied but has learned the hard way to never look too far ahead.

“I’d say so,” he replies to a question about whether he is enjoying the steadiest form of his career. “Consistent­ly anyway. This has got to be close to the most I have played in a season. So I’d probably say it’s close if not the most consistent­ly I’ve played in my career.

“I think at the end of the season I will look back and focus on it then. Right now I’ve just been training and playing and my body’s feeling good. It’s been really enjoyable playing under the manager and with the boys here. For me, it’s about focusing on the next day and the next game and not looking too far into the future.

“I know it is cliche but it is so important we go into every game with full concentrat­ion and full belief in what we have been doing for the last months since the gaffer came in. We stick to everything that has got us in this position and the rest will take care of itself.”

 ?? ?? John Souttar trains ahead of Rangers’ match at Ross County
John Souttar trains ahead of Rangers’ match at Ross County

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