Daily Record

WE WON’T BUDGE ON BELIEF IT’S TOO EARLY TO JUDGE

Boss Gio backs Bennett and insists summer signings need more time

- BY ANDY NEWPORT

JOHN BENNETT may be the only person in Britain who watched Liz Truss squirm and stutter her way through this week’s round of toe-curling radio interviews and breathed a sigh of relief.

Not because the dithering Prime Minister had managed to convince the Rangers chief that she and her new chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng aren’t, as we’re all beginning to fear, a ticking timebomb ready to sink the nation’s economy.

But rather that her series of excruciati­ng showdowns with a cast of local presenters from the BBC regions has mercifully knocked the Ibrox vice-chairman out of the running for the most ill-advised interview of the year.

If Bennett hoped to reassure the grumbling Light Blues legions that all was well when he sat down for the gentlest of grillings from the club’s in-house TV channel last week, he thought wrong.

His two-part, 33-minute address only served to rile up a fanbase already frothing over the club’s recent performanc­es on and off the pitch. Club 1872 branded the puff-piece performanc­e “patronisin­g” and “out of touch”.

You’d have been advised to wait until after the 9pm watershed before wading into the replies online after he insisted the club was not “hoarding” their Champions League cash.

But while most punters weren’t buying some of Bennett’s patter, Gio van Bronckhors­t was in full agreement with one point the Ibrox director made.

“I learned long ago not to judge a new Rangers player within weeks,” said Bennett as he appealed for calm after his gaffer opted to start without a single one of his seven summer signings in their recent clash with Napoli.

That move by the Dutchman looked at the time like he was sending a message to the club’s recruitmen­t team.

But van Bronckhors­t instead insists he was merely looking out for a group of players still getting to grips with new surroundin­gs.

“Some players need more time than others when they change clubs,” said the Ibrox manager. “Getting used to a new level, getting used to team-mates.

“That’s a process I’ve seen before as a player but also as a manager.

“So I totally agree with what John said. And we just keep on working with them.

“We have a couple of signings who have done really well, some take more time.

“But you can look around you in any team, abroad or domestical­ly, and it’s not often you have a new signing that plays straight away and becomes part of the team. Some take more time than others.

“That’s the patience you have to have as a manager.

“We have good examples already in the team of players who are part of the core who took a longer time to adjust to a new club.

“So it’s normal and no different to what I am used to. Every club has its own identity and culture.

“But it’s also the change of country, change of club, change of staff, change of team-mates. There are a lot of factors which weigh on the way a player adjusts.

“So it is not only about Rangers, it’s also about the change in environmen­t and culture.”

Gers spent north of £10million this summer signing Ben Davies, Rabbi Matondo and Ridvan Yilmaz but there’s been only fleeting appearance­s from the trio.

Davies is in contention for a start this weekend having overcome the injury that disrupted his first few weeks in Glasgow.

Van Bronckhors­t expects Yilmaz to come good after his £3.4m Beskitas move but, like former ex-Schalke ace Matondo, he’ll have to earn his place.

He said: “We got Rabbi because we wanted to have more options.

“It wasn’t just buying him to put him on the wing. Also we have Scott Wright or Scotty Arfield to put on that wing. So it’s a process you have to look at as a manager.

“Players have to prove

Some players need more time than others when they join new clubs GIO VAN BRONCKHORS­T

ON HIS NEW ARRIVALS

themselves over and over again. The way we play with our fixed winger or a midfielder who comes in, those are the difference­s in the way our players play that position.

“But as far as I’m concerned the best will play.

“Tactically in terms of what we need but also performanc­es.

“So far that’s what I look for on the right wing.

“Ridvan, of course for him it is a new club and a new country. He is settling in really well.

“In the beginning it was a bit hard for him to get settled but I see improvemen­t in his training and also in his behaviour.

“He is more settled and that is always good to see. We have to see in the coming weeks that he will feature more in the team.”

Celtic’s slip-up against St Mirren last time out has opened the door for Rangers to go back top of the table for half an hour at least when they run out at Tynecastle today.

But only if they can improve an away record that so far this season stands at just two wins from six games on the road.

“I’m not bothered about records,” insisted van Bronckhors­t. “I’m not going to go there and look at my away record.

“I just go out and try to win the game and that’s all I need to know in my head. So I will go for a 100 percent record of three points.

“That’s all I care about. Records? I don’t see the positives or negatives, it doesn’t influence me.

“We had a big defeat (against Celtic) but almost got the three points with nine men against Hibs.

“But there is all to play for. We only concentrat­e on the three points every game.”

 ?? ?? MISSING MEN Ben Davies, Ridvan Yilmaz and Rabbi Matondo have all barely featured for Gers since they arrived in the summer
MISSING MEN Ben Davies, Ridvan Yilmaz and Rabbi Matondo have all barely featured for Gers since they arrived in the summer
 ?? ?? BLUES BROTHERS Boss van Bronckhors­t has backed vice chairman Bennett, above, and his comments on new players who have come in to Rangers
BLUES BROTHERS Boss van Bronckhors­t has backed vice chairman Bennett, above, and his comments on new players who have come in to Rangers

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