The Scotsman

Mcauley tells Morelos to keep control

● Defender admits standards dropped ● Team determined to challenge for title

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

Rangers defender Gareth Mc au leyh as urged alfred o Morelos to display greater self control after the striker’s latest bout of indiscipli­ne earned him another suspension.

The Colombian internatio­nal was sent off for two bookable offences as Rangers lost 1-0 at home to Aberdeen on Wednesday night and dropped back to second place in the Scottish Premiershi­p table.

Morelos has now collected 12 yellow cards and three red cards this season, albeit one of his dismissals was later reduced to a caution on appeal.

The 22 year-old was already suspended for Rangers’ next league fixture against Dundee at Dens Park this Sunday under the Scottish FA’S totting-up disciplina­ry procedures. His red card against Aberdeen means he will also sit out the game against Hamilton Accies at Ibrox on 16 December.

Veteran defender Mcauley insists Morelos, top scorer for Rangers with 17 goals this season, will not be singled out for blame by his team-mates, who appreciate that his aggressive streak is a key component of his game.

But Mcauley says Morelos has to learn to stay out of trouble when placed in the kind of situation he faced on Wednesday. The

Having spent much of his career defying expectatio­ns with club and country, Gareth Mcauley is now confrontin­g the challenge of having to fulfil them on a weekly basis at Rangers.

It was a demand he and his team-mates could not meet on Wednesday night as the club’s return to the top of the league for the first time in seven years proved short-lived.

The 1-0 defeat to Aberdeen at Ibrox, the first home loss suffered under Steven Gerrard’s management, raised fresh doubts over whether the Rangers squad have the mental strength required for a sustained and successful title tilt.

Veteran defender Mcauley admits playing for the club he supported as a boy is unlike any of his previous experience­s, which include representi­ng Northern Ireland at Euro 2016 and seven years in the English Premier League with West Bromwich Albion.

But he insists he is relishing the relentless scrutiny placed on Rangers and believes he has joined a group of players capable of coping with it.

“Second is nowhere at this club – that’s basically it,” said Mcauley as he reflected on the midweek setback which saw Gerrard’s men slip back into second place in the Premiershi­p table, one point behind surprise leaders Kilmarnock and ahead of third-placed Celtic on goals scored.

“It’s certainly different to clubs I’ve played at before. It’s intense but it’s enjoyable. It’s a great pressure.

“That demand to win, day in and day out, is what you

should have as a footballer. Everyone here has the desire as a group to go and challenge (for the title).

“We need to make sure we win at Dundee on Sunday and win going forward. It’s a massive club and you have a massive responsibi­lity on and off the pitch to make sure we win. We want to get back to the top of the league and stay there.”

It was an unhappy 39th birthday for Mcauley on Wednesday as Scott Mckenna’s seventh minute goal, which came from a set piece poorly defended by Rangers, proved enough to earn Aberdeen all three points.

As dismayed as he was by their performanc­e, Mcauley wasn’t convinced the defeat came as a consequenc­e of Rangers failing to handle the pressure of going into the match as league leaders.

“I’m not sure about that,” he added. “It was the first time in a long time the club had been top of the league but we didn’t talk about that before the game. The focus was on winning

game. We knew what Aberdeen were going to do and they did it very well.

“We started slow and got sucked into how they wanted to play, rather than how we wanted to play. We started getting frustrated. That played into their hands.

“They won a lot of free-kicks in the first half, put a lot of balls into the box and scored off one of them. We were disappoint­ed we didn’t defend that better, although Mckenna finished it well, to be fair.

“That’s disappoint­ing for me personally and for the other defenders. That’s why we are looking at our own performanc­e as our downfall. We were sitting in the dressing room looking at ourselves after the game. Our standards dropped individual­ly and as a team. We

let ourselves down all over the park from where we have been this season. That’s why we lost the game.”

While much of the focus on Rangers’ quest to restore themselves as a trophy-winning force in Scotland centres on Celtic’s current domestic dominance, Mcauley has been impressed by the rest of the Premiershi­p teams since he moved to Ibrox on a free transfer in the summer.

“From what I’ve seen so far, it’s a really competitiv­e league,” he said. “It’s a tough league, it’s tight. We know we have work to do against all of the teams.

“Bubbling under the surface we have that desire to do the hard work. We’ll get back on the training pitch and hopefully put it right on Sunday.”

COMPETITIV­E EDGE

“It’s a really competitiv­e league. It’s a tough league, it’s tight. We know we have work to do against all of the teams.”

GARETH MCAULEY

 ??  ?? 0 Gareth Mcauley, centre, and defensive colleague Connor Goldson show their frustratio­n at the end of Rangers 1-0 defeat by Aberdeen.
0 Gareth Mcauley, centre, and defensive colleague Connor Goldson show their frustratio­n at the end of Rangers 1-0 defeat by Aberdeen.

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