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Christchurch Rangers

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Everything posted by Christchurch Rangers

  1. arrrrrrgh crap should say "we've moved on says" whilst i like alot of what Green says here in this article, however I am somewhat puzzled with this quote: "He praised both the fans and manager Ally McCoist for the progress made on the pitch this season, adding: "Ally McCoist deserves everyone's full support as he and his team continue to make the Rangers team strong again." Isn't the progress on the pitch side of things generally needing a lot of improvement?
  2. "The attitude of Rangers supporters in the last 12 months to the club they love has been the true essence of loyalty, and humbling to witness." http://espnfc.com/news/story/_/id/1339989/we've-moved-on,-says-rangers'-charles-green?cc=3436 Rangers chief executive Charles Green says the club have "moved on", 12 months after the start of the chain of events that has ended with them playing in Scottish Division Three. PA PhotosCharles Green praised Rangers fans and the club's manager Ally McCoist This time last season, the Glasgow club went into administration. They were subsequently liquidated before a consortium led by Green bought the assets and business to found the newco Rangers. But Rangers now sit at the top of Division Three as they begin what they hope will be an ascent back to the SPL and an eventual return to European football. They have also raised more than £22 million from a December stock exchange listing - a windfall Green believes will help smooth their path back to the game's higher echelons. "As a club, we are not just ready to move on - we have moved on," he told the official Rangers website. "The successful flotation of the club... was the biggest single step on the road to recovery. "The fact that our business could attract in excess of £22 million of investment in a challenging economic climate was heart-warming testament to the belief of investors, from City institutions to individual fans. "All along, we have known that the rebuilding of the club on the pitch will take time, and we are prepared for that." He praised both the fans and manager Ally McCoist for the progress made on the pitch this season, adding: "Ally McCoist deserves everyone's full support as he and his team continue to make the Rangers team strong again. "Finally, the most outstanding feature of the last year has been Rangers fans themselves. Nothing could have prepared me for what I have seen at Ibrox and around the world. "The attitude of Rangers supporters in the last 12 months to the club they love has been the true essence of loyalty, and humbling to witness." He said every Rangers fan "stands tall today and can look forward", adding: "We are on the way back.'' Manager McCoist told Sky Sports "the lads have done very well in the league" and added: "It would be a thoroughly deserved title. It's not there yet, but obviously that is the target. It would be the first rung on the ladder." Former Rangers owner Craig Whyte has again denied any wrongdoing during his time at Ibrox. Administrators Duff and Phelps were appointed after HMRC lodged a petition over the non-payment of PAYE and VAT following Whyte's 2011 takeover. But he told Sky Sport News: "I welcome any fair investigation into anything to do with the takeover, the insolvency, whatever. "I would welcome that and be happy to co-operate with any of it, and anybody will see there is no wrongdoing whatsoever.''
  3. all whites second goal was a ripper after that i forget what happens in the game hehe but i do know we wuz robbed dont you love the haircuts back then
  4. shows how good my memory is I cant even remember what city it was where the All Whites nearly beat Scotland in the 82 World Cup, was a great game was it seville? Valencia? gonna have to go have a look
  5. they say charity begins at home so why dont they go back there then
  6. Good article always enjoy reading John Gow's Rangers blog on soccernet.com good old fashioned honest reading every time
  7. you might wanna get your magnifying glass out to read it tho....
  8. The saviours who worked for free: McCoist and McDowall should get the credit they deserve for keeping Rangers alive By Stephen Mcgowan PUBLISHED: 18:49 GMT, 14 February 2013 | UPDATED: 18:49 GMT, 14 February 2013 Comments (0) Share Twelve months today Rangers entered administration. Few will forget the moment they heard the news in a hurry. For Scottish football this was dangerous, perilous, unimaginable stuff. A JFK moment. A board of directors was instantly wiped out, Duff and Phelps commandeered Murray Park, players were asked to take swingeing pay-cuts, staff feared for their jobs and manager Ally McCoist was left the last man standing. Hero: Ever since administration began, Ally McCoist has been completely committed to the cause Publicly, the image of McCoist as a man alone during a traumatic period is an enduring one. Yet his assistant manager Kenny McDowall was by his side, hour by hour, day by day, helping the manager to hold back a tsunami. An experience he describes now as ‘horrendous’. McCoist effectively held the club together, fulfilling the roles of acting chief executive, financial controller and social worker. All whilst trying to deal with a 10 point penalty and the certainty of a league title lost. An intelligent and astute right hand man, McDowall played his part, but believes the debt of gratitude Rangers owe to their manager is incalculable. 'If you give out medals for that kind of stuff Ally should get one,' he states. 'I don’t think there’s anybody who’s had to do what he’s done. There was nobody else. 'Ally was running the whole place. Martin Bain, the chief exec, had left, there wasn’t a board so he was having to call all the shots at various meetings. Desperate: Administrator Paul Clark had to deal with all cost cutting solutions, including players' wages 'It was very difficult for him as he had to make decisions on things that normally would be made for you. He took on all these different roles and handled them all unbelievably. He’s an intelligent guy, Coisty. That’s what made him able to handle all that.' For the media the toil of standing outside Murray Park in cold, wind and rain was shared on a rotational basis. Players would train then leave, blacked out car windows obscuring their true emotions. As McCoist flitted around Glasgow meeting administrators, players and potential saviour, however, the saga became his life. There was a physical price being claimed and it was there, etched on the manager’s face. 'When you’re embroiled in it at that time you can’t really see the toll it’s taking,' McDowall reflects now. 'But we were all feeling it. 'Ally was being stuck up in front of cameras and microphones and he would solve one problem and then get hit with another. He was constantly problem solving. 'I spent many a late night with him in at Murray Park and it was horrendous. It was just constant, all sort of issues cropping up that had to be dealt with and decisions to be made. It was all business stuff, as well as trying to get players ready - which was our actual job. Donations: The Rangers Fighting Fund have been trying to keep Rangers tradition and history intact 'He was concerned about the girls in the kitchen, the whole staff at Ibrox. He had a lot of people in his thoughts. He didn’t want one person to get sacked from the place.' For a time redundancies seemed inevitable and unavoidable. Agents came and left Murray Park late into the night. McCoist and one or two players agreed to work for nothing to save the jobs of others, but asking overseas players to accept 75% wage cuts proved a difficult hurdle to cross. McCoist did his best to assure key players and probably feels now he was treated shabbily by players who then chose to take advantage of TUPE regulations to leave for free last summer. Around every corner there were hammer blows waiting. 'I was like a sounding board for him as he was having to do a lot of stuff upstairs as well,' McDowall recalls. 'He was being moved from pillar to post at that time, and having to juggle a lot of balls. 'But he just managed the club fantastically well, in a business sense more than anything. Me and Durranty were there for him and he knew that.' Time: Rangers will take several years to return to the Scottish Premier League When the player wage cuts required to limp through were finally achieved there were other matters. Perplexing, detailed minutae beyond the grasp of business journalists let alone football people. For McCoist much of the last year has been spent in business meetings. With football authorities, prospective owners, lawyers, administrators and potential signings. McDowall was no stranger to financial peril in his days as a St Mirren striker, but this was on a level unprecedented in Scottish football. 'There were a few points when I actually wondered ‘how can this continue?’ When is it going to end? 'From administration onwards it was hurdle after hurdle. We didn’t know what league we would be allowed to play in and there was the carry on with players leaving. It was horrific. 'You were left standing in a job that wasn’t really there because you don’t have a team and don’t know who or if you are going to play. 'When you turn up to find six players you know you’re in trouble. Trying to attract players of a good standard when you don’t know what division you’ll be playing in is hard. 'The training ground was probably the only place I remember Ally smiling. That was a low time for everyone. Ally had a lot to contend with. 'The enjoyment was the football side and that was tough as well. We always look at the side as the one that keeps us in a job - winning football matches. 'If something like that can happen to a place like this then nowhere’s safe. 'When it actually happened, that’s when the shock happens because suddenly it’s real and you wonder what’s going to happen. Is the place going to close?' Clashes: Their chance of playing the biggest teams in Scotland only lies in the cup competitions Somehow the identity and soul of Rangers survived a near fatality and will mark the first anniversary of their annus horriblis with a documentary on the club TV channel tonight. ‘The Rising; Rangers One Year On’ tells its own tale. It comes against a backdrop of unrest over performances on the pitch, with McCoist facing questions from those McDowall suspects of harbouring short memories. 'I think he deserves better but the majority are giving him that backing. If you take it back a year to see what he went through for the last 12 months. 'When you sign up to be a manager you know your remit is to sign players and put out a successful. But Ally has been doing 10 people’s jobs. For nothing. 'I hope this year I hope Coisty gets the credit he’s due if and when we manage to win the championship because he deserves some people to come out and say ‘that’s a hell of a job you’ve done.’ The Rising: Rangers One Year On; RangersTV tonight at 7pm. Log on to www.rangerstv. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2278795/Ally-McCoist-Kenny-McDowall-credit-deserve-keeping-Rangers-alive.html#ixzz2KuQ0K0EB Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
  9. oh yeah i had forgotten about rangers foray into ozzie soccer what happened as i am guessing the investment is no more?
  10. I'm quite happy with Ferguson if it wasnt for Perth, Wellington Phoenix would still be bottom of the table all i can say is i hope the new manager keeps up the good work go the phoenix hehe
  11. it used to hold way way more than that though i remember that from when the All Whites were in the 82 World Cup all seater stadiums are the death of atmosphere at football games im afraid
  12. sheesh i posted before i thought and now realise my answer is wrong i was gonna say former player as manager
  13. doing fine, making a good recovery but still tender in some areas
  14. cheers for posting the video mate: lot of work went into that display didn't it Reminds me of chatting up girls: putting in a whole lot of effort to get there and then when you are there it's all over in a just few seconds...
  15. excellent look forward to seeing them she sounds like the perfect woman to me enjoy your dayout!
  16. sounds like you have got a keeper there mate and im not talking the gloved kind
  17. yer i know what you mean i have mixed feelings bout all this branding business tho on the one hand i know that at the top level of football (or even in Division 3?!) you gotta make money to compete with the other leading clubs but Rangers as a commercial brand for people that know nothing about the club? im not really keen on travelling to Shanghai or the like and seeing 3 million chinese people wearing rangers shirts cos they like the colour blue...but dont even know who is playing in the team know what i mean? but hey im just thinking out loud here so dont take it too serious
  18. lets all laugh at c*ltic lets all laugh at c*ltic nah-nah nah nah nah-nah nah nah
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