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Bearsden bear

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  1. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to gmcf in Bisgrove confirms £27.9m commercial revenue target has been met   
    I think there's a balance to be had .
    We all want the best for the club but most folks finances are struggling at these trying times . 
    Some things we can capitalise on , like corporate facilities or a European run , but others , like paying an extra £40 after paying £500+ for a ST , is just taking advantage of a captive audience that live and breathe Rangers .
  2. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to frenv in Elite / JD Sports   
    Amazing timing to bury the start of the class action against the circle of horror from the East in the media.
  3. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to stevemac in Season Ticket Renewals   
    am a right in thinking as well if i get one a won't need to keep renewing mygers? once youve got a ST you dont need to fork out for mygers every year do ye?
  4. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Malkytfp1 in Bassey   
    I actually think we should sell for £20m + if it comes.
    The danger with keeping him another season is he regresses and we lose the value. There has to be an element of 'strike whilst the iron's hot' with transfers, especially when we are aiming to be a club who develops young players and sell them on for profit.
  5. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Johnstone Burgh in Balogun   
    He’s 34 this month. We have enough old cunts in the dressing room taking on leadership roles. 
  6. Like
    Bearsden bear got a reaction from The Ibrox Derry in How we could have been Glasgow Rovers....   
    Imagine starting a football team with your mates and it becoming the institution that Rangers is!
    Must have had immense pride in who the club evolved and grew.
  7. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to MisterC in How we could have been Glasgow Rovers....   
    THE only first-person account ever written about the formation of Rangers in 1872 has been unearthed after lying undiscovered for 76 years – and it reveals the founding fathers considered naming the Glasgow club Rovers.
    David Mason, the Rangers historian, this week launched his new official biography of the Ibrox institution, The Rangers Story: 150 Years Of A Remarkable Football Club, as part of the sesquicentennial anniversary celebrations.
    During the course of his research for the book, Mason came into possession of a short hand-written autobiography penned by a Scottish man called James Hill in Canada before he died in 1946.
    Hill had grown up in Glasgow in the 1860s and 1870s and had been present at Fleshers Haugh on Glasgow Green when the club formed by Moses McNeill, Peter McNeill, Peter Campbell and William McBeath played their first games.
    Hill – who was the younger brother of the eminent early Rangers player and Scotland internationalist David, who is pictured in the iconic photograph of the 1877 Scottish Cup final team, and who also played in some first team games himself – emigrated to Canada in 1882.
    However, he wrote his memoirs before he passed away aged 86. In them, he recalls how members of the Argyle Cricket Club joined in games of football with the McNeill brothers, Campbell and McBeath and helped to establish the new club.
    He also confirms the colours worn by the first side were light blue and reveals the name Rovers was considered when Rangers were constituted in 1873.
    Hill’s granddaughter Meryle Nerland travelled to Scotland back in the 1990s and passed on the manuscript to the then Rangers commercial director Bob Reilly during a visit to Ibrox.
    Mason discovered the document when he was writing The Rangers Story and contacted Hill’s great-granddaughter Sonya Savage, a prominent Canadian politician who has served as the Minister of Justice as well as the Solicitor General for Alberta, to request permission to use it.
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    “There have been various accounts of Rangers’ formation over the years,” he said. “One was written by William Dunlop, who played in the 1877 team. He wrote quite an authoritative account about the formation. But he wasn’t there. He was just talking about what he had been told. It was second-hand information.
    “Moses McNeill did a piece in the Evening Times in 1935. But that was written by John Allan, who produced Rangers’ first history. It was closely aligned to that book and we know there were some errors in it.
    “Apart from that, nothing has ever emanated from someone who was actually there at the time Rangers were formed. That is the beauty of the Hill account. This is an account from someone who was integral to the formation of Rangers. It isn’t anecdotal information.  
    “Nobody until now has ever shown the association of cricket in the formation of the club. It aligns with what was happening in football at that time. It also shows they played in light blue. There has been some debate about whether they played in light blue or royal blue.
    “It also shows they considered the name Rovers. They played under different guises early on. They operated under the name Western for a time, they were also called Argyle.
    “But in 1873 when they were constituted they finally decided on the name Rangers. There were various suggestions put around. Rovers was one of them, but they decided on Rangers.
    “The reason was that Moses McNeill saw the name Rangers in an English rugby football annual. He felt it was an apt name because they were mainly boys from out of town so they were strangers.
    “Hill’s autobiographical account had remained lost in family archives until a chance encounter I had with his descendants a few years ago. It is fascinating on a number of levels.
    “It highlights the emerging popularity of football at the expense of the summer game of cricket.  It also provides some context to the development of the club. But it is the role of the Argyle cricketers that is intriguing.”
    Hill wrote: “He (David) excelled in cricket, was a good bowler, and was a leader in the Argyle Cricket Club, which played on Saturday afternoons on Glasgow Green with other boys who attended St James Parish School. That would be about 1870 to 1873.
    “About that time, the Rangers made a start. Some youths from the Gareloch used to meet and kick a football on the Saturday afternoon.  It was not long until the boys of Argyle CC got interested and discarded the cricket and joined in playing football.
    “They used to pick sides and have good games. It ended by their amalgamating into a club and calling it the Rangers, with light blue sweaters and white pants (knickers). 
    “If I remember, there were other names proposed.  Rovers I think was the other name, but Rangers carried and it certainly has been a great club in Scotland, playing association football.”
    He continued:  “They were playing in Glasgow Green and there was quite a competition to get the playing ground near the shrubbery on the Fleshers Haugh.
    “As I was attending school, and had a holiday on Saturday, I sometimes got the Rangers goal posts in position on that pitch. As I grew older, I got playing if they were short a man and in time I was a recognised player in the 2nd eleven. I occasionally filled a place in the 1st eleven but my coming to Canada put a stop to my football career.
    “Davie played with the 1st eleven from its beginning and although he was the youngest player in the team, he done so well. He was picked by the Football Association to play against England in 1882. They done well that year as they beat England 6-2, if I remember alright, in the Oval, London. He also played against Wales and Ireland. 
    “He generally got the credit of being the originator of the passing game. In association football, as most players at that time (were) inclined to hang on to the ball until they lost it.”
    Mason said: “Hill’s account is really important information. His granddaughter has passed away. But I contacted the family and received permission to use the memoirs.
    “His great-grandaughter Sonya Savage sent me an email stating she had no objections and congratulating Rangers on reaching ‘the great milestone of 150 years’.”
     
    The Rangers Story: 150 Years Of A Remarkable Football Club by David Mason is published by Pitch Publishing and costs £40.
    I knew we played games under the name of Argyle and Western in the very early days but I didn't know we could have been called Rovers . Fascinating bit of history here 
  8. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Malkytfp1 in Dr Mark Waller Leaving   
    Played a big part in 55 faking the covid test results. Will miss him.
  9. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Docspawn in Connor Goldson Signs New 4 Year Contract   
    Excellent news, great great news. Gets bit of stick sometimes but I’m delighted with this. 
  10. Like
    Bearsden bear got a reaction from Docspawn in Connor Goldson Signs New 4 Year Contract   
    Shocked but delighted with this. 
    I know he's not perfect, but hes always fit and we need that with likes of Balogun, Souttar and the big swede who are all pretty injury prone.
  11. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to esquire8 in Connor Goldson Signs New 4 Year Contract   
    Again, it better not be.
  12. Like
    Bearsden bear got a reaction from Copland bear in Lionel Letizi   
    Absolutely, that howler against motherwell will live long in the memory🙄
    Heard him on a podcast, he was looking back on his career and you would think he was Buffoon. 
  13. Like
    Bearsden bear got a reaction from Ambrogio in Lionel Letizi   
    Absolutely, that howler against motherwell will live long in the memory🙄
    Heard him on a podcast, he was looking back on his career and you would think he was Buffoon. 
  14. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to G.E.C. in Lionel Letizi   
    Not going to lie I thought he was deid when I seen the thread title.
  15. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Ambrogio in Lionel Letizi   
    Nothing personal against him but cammy bell was fuckin rotten man .
  16. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to DiamondDan in VIP hospitality   
    The OP only has a wee willy anyway so should be OK.
  17. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to delparlane in Has this season been a success?   
    Just a bridge too far, but even though we fell just short in the league and Europa League final we have nothing to be ashamed of. Even with all the games we had to endure, that mob only squeaked the SPL, and we certainly made Europe take notice with Frankfurt only shading us by a PK in the EL final. Ending on a high in the SCF brightened my assessment of this season quite a bit. Yes, it could have been out-of-this world brilliant, but we still have much to be proud of.
  18. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to SPWF in Has this season been a success?   
    Winning only one cup can’t be considered a success at Rangers. But given we were generally poor domestically, yet still only 4 points off that mob’s apparent Barca 09 reincarnate, and made the Europa League final, it can’t be considered a failure either. A very strange season really. 
     
    “Marge I’m confused, is this a happy ending, or a sad ending?”
    ”It’s an ending, that’s enough.”
    Basically. 
  19. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to AberfeldyBlue in Has this season been a success?   
    we lost an influential manager half way so yes
  20. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Graham in Squad fitness   
    We've played 1 less than as many as we could possibly have played at the start of the season. We've been the better team 4 times in extra time, all near the end of the season. One in 30+ degree heat and one 3 days later to pick ourselves up to win the cup and send several players away with silverware.
     
    Our squad fitness is absolutely phenomenal and our coaching staff deserve all the plaudits for that.
     
    Unbelievable
  21. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to Essandoh in Message from Frankfurt   
    I mean there does come a point where it just becomes patronising 
  22. Like
    Bearsden bear got a reaction from Bad Robot in What Does The Name Eintracht Mean To You?   
    Up until tonight I only remember hearing about real Madrid beating them at hampden In the 60s.
    Tbh they weren't very good but neither were we.
  23. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to esquire8 in What an effort - Hold your heads high lads.   
    More coherent than what @Dickiewas last night tbh....
  24. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to SPWF in What an effort - Hold your heads high lads.   
    Make a lot of good points here IMO. 
  25. Like
    Bearsden bear reacted to My Fathers Scarf in The fans were pish   
    Totally agree mate. To many fans there to say they were there rather than proper fans who should've been there. 
     
     
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