The Scotsman

Craig on the spot as late, late penalty pegs back Rangers

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY at Mcdiarmid Park

On a night of firsts for Rangers, there were mixed feelings for Steven Gerrard’s side as they maintained their unbeaten Premiershi­p record.

Scott Wright’s first goal for the Ibrox club looked to have secured a victory over St Johnstonea­tmcdiar mid park ahead of the more significan­t Scottish Cup quarter-final meeting of the sides at Ibrox on Sunday. But Jack Simpson’s first starting appearance for Rangers turned sour in the fourth minute of stoppage time when his foul on Chris Kane saw Saints awarded a penalty emphatical­ly converted by Liam Craig.

The home team will feel justice was served, having been denied an earlier claim by referee Euan Anderson who changed his mind after initially pointing to the spot.

It was night when Gerrard felt able to rest several key players and also experiment with his formation, deploying a 4-42 system which saw Kemar Roofe and Cedric Itten given a chance to show what they can do together up front. on this evidence, it’s a partnershi­p which needs more time to gel.

G err a rd could again be hugely encouraged by the lively performanc­e of scorer Wright, while captain James Tavernier made a solid return from the knee injury which had seen him miss the last 10 games.

The seven changes Gerrard made to his starting line-up from the Scottish Cup win over Celtic three days earlier underlined where his priorities lay. By contrast, saints boss call um Davidson was not in a position to treat the league fixture as of such secondary importance. With a fifth-place finish and potential European qualificat­ion still a target for his club, he sent out arguably his strongest eleven.

Before Rangers secured a measure of control, the hosts should have taken advantage of a vibrant opening which saw both li am craig and guy me lamed direct efforts straight into the arms of Jon Mclaughlin. After that early burst of Saints’ pressure, rangers were largely the more dominant side without creating much in the way of clear openings.

Simpson might have marked his first start with a goal, trying to be just too precise with a header which looped over, while Zander Clark had to sprint off his line to deny Wright. But the Saints goalkeeper was powerless to prevent Wright making the breakthrou­gh 10 minutes into the second half. Steven Davis was the provider and Wright showed great awareness and composure to bend his shot wide of Clark’s left hand from the corner of the penalty area.

After the chaos and confusion of Saints’ first penalty claim, when Shaun Rooney went down under a challenge from Borna Barisic, it looked as if Rangers would rack up yet another victory and clean sheet. But it eluded them in the final seconds. Simpson had enjoyed a steady first full appearance since his winter transfer window move from Bournemout­h but the big defender was caught unawares by Kane at the last.

St Johnstone: Clark, Kerr, Gordon, Mccart; Rooney, Mccann, Craig, Booth (Tanser 73); Wotherspoo­n (Bryson 78); May (O’halloran 73), Melamed (Kane 22). Subs not used: Parish, Brown, Gilmour, Ferguson.

Rangers: Mclaughlin, Tavernier (Patterson 62), Goldson, Simpson, Barisic (Bassey 79); Hagi (Defoe 79), Kamara, Davis (Aribo 69), Wright (Arfield 69); Itten, Roofe. Subs not used: Mcgregor, Helander, Kent, Morelos.

 ??  ?? 0 Liam Craig, left, celebrates after scoring from the penalty spot in the dying seconds to earn a point for St Johnstone
0 Liam Craig, left, celebrates after scoring from the penalty spot in the dying seconds to earn a point for St Johnstone
 ??  ?? 0 Scott Wright: Scored first goal for Rangers
0 Scott Wright: Scored first goal for Rangers

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