Rangers Football Club are an association football team based in Glasgow, Scotland who currently play in the Scottish Premier League. The club are nicknamed the Gers, Teddy Bears (from the rhyming slang for the same) and the Light Blues,[3] and the fans are known to each other as bluenoses.[4] They are sometimes referred to as Glasgow Rangers, although the word Glasgow does not form part of the club's official title.[5] The club is incorporated as The Rangers Football Club plc.[6] The club's home is the all-seated 51,082-capacity Ibrox Stadium in south-west Glasgow.
Rangers have won 52 domestic league titles, more than any other team in the world. They have won the Scottish League Cup 25 times more than any other Scottish club and the Scottish Cup 33 times.[7] In 1961 Rangers were the first British team to compete in a European final when they reached the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup. They won the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1972, having been the runners-up in 1961 and 1967, and were runners-up in the 2008 UEFA Cup Final. An estimated 150,000 Rangers fans made the journey to Manchester for the final, most of whom did not have tickets.
Rangers' players and fans today are multi-national and of various
religious and political affiliations, although the club have
traditionally been identified with and favoured the Protestant and Unionist community of Scotland, as well as the Unionist community in Northern Ireland. For most of their history, Rangers have enjoyed a fierce rivalry with their cross-city opponents Celtic,[8] and the two are collectively known as the Old Firm.
The four founders of Rangers - brothers Moses and Peter McNeil, Peter Campbell and William McBeath - met in 1872 and named their team after an English rugby club upon seeing the name in a book.[9] In May of that year the first match was played, a 00 draw in a friendly against Callander F.C. on Glasgow Green.[10]
The official founding of Rangers is recognised as taking place in 1873,
when the club held its first annual meeting and staff were elected. The
first season's fixtures were all friendlies, as the deadline for
joining the Scottish Football Association had been missed, meaning the team did not take part in the inaugural Scottish Cup.[10] By 1876 Rangers had their first internationalist, with Moses McNeil representing Scotland in a match against Wales, and by 1877 Rangers had reached a Scottish Cup final. The first ever Old Firm
match took place in 1888, the year of Celtic's establishment. Rangers
lost 52 in a friendly to a team largely comprised of "guest players"
from Hibernian.
The 189091 season saw the inception of the Scottish Football League, and Rangers were one of ten original members. By this time Rangers were playing at the first Ibrox Stadium. Rangers' first ever league match took place on 16 August 1890 and resulted in a 52 victory over Heart of Midlothian. After finishing equal-top with Dumbarton a play-off was held at Cathkin Park
to decide the who would be champions. The match finished 22 and the
title was shared for the only time in its history, the first of
Rangers' world record 52 championships.[10] Rangers' first ever Scottish Cup win came in 1894 after a 31 victory over rivals Celtic in the final. By the turn of the century Rangers had won two league titles and three Scottish Cups.
The Wilton years
Rangers were in the ascendant at the turn of the century, winning
the championship seven times between 1900 and 1918 (with four League
title in a row). The season of 189899 was particularly memorable, in
that it saw the Gers win all 18 league games to establish a perfect
record.
But between 1902 and 1910, Celtic took over as the dominant force, and though Rangers had the chance to foil a third League and Cup double in 1909, the Scottish FA withheld the Cup due to disgraceful scenes after a pitch invasion by a drunken fans. The Hampden Riot
had written itself a sorry page in the history books, and both clubs
were ordered to compensate hosts Queen's Park for the damage caused by
their fans.
Having lost the title in 1919 they responded in 1920 with one of the best seasons in their history as manager William Wilton and his right hand man Bill Struth
retained the title netting 106 goals in 42 league games. However, in
May 1920 the clubs first ever manager, William Wilton, died in a
boating accident and Bill Struth was subsequently appointed manager.
Struth's era
The 1920-21 season heralded the dawn of a new era for Rangers as manager Bill Struth
initiated a Rangers dominance that was to last until the outbreak of
the Second World War in 1939. Struth guided Rangers to 14 titles before
the war. This period was also noteworthy for the attendances. On the 2
January 1939 a British league record was broken as 118,567 fans turned
out to watch Rangers beat Celtic in the traditional new year holiday
old firm match.[11]
The post-war seasons saw Rangers well on top, but not before a
boardroom coup in the summer of 1947. The board of Rangers had
previously been an amateur body made up of former player, but when
chairman James Bowie
suggested a 71-year-old Struth retire in order to allow a younger man
to take charge, a revolution occurred. Bowie was forced out the chair
and was said never to have sent foot in Ibrox ever again such was his disdain for the circumstances of his departure
Under Symon
Symon became manager in June 1954 and continued Struth's success
winning six league championships, five Scottish Cups and four League
Cups. He also became the second manager to win the domestic treble in season 196364.
In season 195657 Symon took Rangers into the European Cup for the first time but it ended abruptly, going out on to French team Nice. The following season however saw Rangers suffer their worst ever defeat to their arch rivals Celtic, losing 71 in the 1957 Scottish League Cup Final. They did however reach the semi-finals of the European Cup in 1960 losing eventually to German club Eintracht Frankfurt
by a record aggregate 124 for a Scottish team. In 1961 Rangers became
the first British team to reach a European final when they contested
the Cup Winners' Cup final against Italian side Fiorentina,
only to lose 41 on aggregate. Rangers suffered yet more despair in the
final of the same competition in 1967, losing 10 after extra time to Bayern Munich.
After these disappointments, the pressure was on Symon and he paid
the penalty of Celtic's success in Scotland and Europe in October 1967,
giving way to his former assistant David White after rejecting a move to make him general manager with White in charge of team affairs.
White takes charge
David White was installed as Rangers' fourth manager in November
1967. White became the first Rangers manager not to win a major trophy.
The lack of honours during his reign at Ibrox, however, masks the fact that he did improve the team during a difficult period and Jock Stein's
Celtic side were at the peak of their success. In his first season as
manager, the team suffered only one defeat - 32 at home to Aberdeen in
the final game. Yet Rangers finished runners-up in the league to
Celtic. The team also reached the 1969 Scottish Cup Final, only to lose out to their Old Firm rivals again by 40.
In Europe, White's team enjoyed two good runs in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in successive years. In 196768, Rangers reached the quarter-finals, losing to Leeds United
20 on aggregate. The following season they went one better and got to
the semi-finals where they again went down 20 on aggregate, this time
to Newcastle United. The good showing in Europe did not continue though, and when White completely under-estimated Polish side Gσrnik Zabrze,
he was removed as manager. White's side had lost 31 in Poland and when
the return leg at Ibrox began, he was promising to, "attack, attack,
attack!" in order to progress. The second-leg result ended in a 31
home defeat for the Gers. The next day, 27 November 1969, White's
assisant Willie Thornton took over as caretaker and the club began to look for a new manager.
European success and national tragedy
The 1971 Ibrox disaster
overshadowed what happened on the pitch to a large extent in the early
1970s. On 2 January 1971, in the final minutes of the New Year's Day
Old Firm game with the score set at 00, Jimmy Johnstone scored for Celtic. Within seconds Colin Stein
had equalised for Rangers. As the 80,000 strong crowd was trying to
disperse at full time, many fell down the stairway at the Copland Road
end of the ground. Their momentum led to large scale crushing and 66
people died. It was initially thought the crush was caused by Rangers
fans rushing back up the stairwell after the equaliser;[12]
however, a later enquiry said that the crush was likely to have
happened ten minutes after the final whistle and to have been triggered
by someone falling on the stairs.[12]
A benefit match to raise funds for the victims' families took place
after the disaster. A joint Rangers and Celtic team took on a Scotland
XI at Hampden watched by 81,405 fans.
In 1972, Rangers defeated Dynamo Moscow to win the Cup Winner's Cup, their first and only European trophy to date. Captain John Greig received the trophy in a small room within the Nou Camp due to a pitch invasion by Rangers fans.[13]
Jock Wallace becomes manager
Wallace's
managership of Rangers saw the club achieve a period of sustained
success. His first season as manager - the club's centenary year -
culminated in a 32 Scottish Cup win over Celtic. A nine-year period of
Celtic dominance in the league was ended in 19741975
as Rangers captured what was to be the last championship of its kind.
The new ten-team Scottish Premier League saw Rangers crowned inaugural
champions, as part of a triumphant domestic treble. After a barren
subsequent season, 19761977, Wallace presided over the club's fourth domestic treble in 19771978.
This burst of success from the mid-1970s
saw Rangers once again established as Scotland's most successful club.
In 1978 Wallace, suddenly and unexpectedly, announced his resignation
while refusing to divulge the reason for his departure. In his wake,
Rangers turned to another of the stalwarts of the great side of the
mid-to-late 1970s, the captain John Greig.
Greig: Captain to Manager
Greig's tenure began promisingly. The 1978-79 season
could so easily have mirrored the previous. Despite a fixture pile-up
which resulted from the club playing three league games in nearly three
months, and some overly negative tactics from Greig, Rangers came close
to winning a quadruple of trophies. Unfortunately it was not to be and
the season ended with just the domestic cup double.
The following the season finished trophyless. Rangers finished an
embarrassing fifth in the league, eleven points behind champions Aberdeen.
Greig's efforts to restructure the team inherited from Wallace proved,
for the most part, fruitless. The early years of the 1980s were ones of
repeated frustration as the club continually failed to mount a
challenge not only to Celtic, but to the resurgent New Firm of Aberdeen and Dundee United.
The gloom of under-performance in the league was punctuated only by
periodic cup triumphs. The Scottish Cup win of 1981, in particular, saw
a triumphant performance by the enigmatic winger, Davie Cooper.
The League Cup proved fertile territory for Rangers throughout the
fallow years of the early 1980s, but it was the failure to add to the
league triumph of 1978 that saw the growing pressure on Greig culminate
in his resignation as manager in October 1983. During this period
attendances at Ibrox dwindled from an average 25,628 in season 197879
to 17,681 in 198283.[14]
Return of Wallace
Jock Wallace
Rangers hoped to rekindle success by bringing Jock Wallace back to the club, following his exile in England with Leicester City. Wallace, though, was not the club's first choice: Jim McLean and Alex Ferguson, the then managers of the New Firm clubs, both rebuffed Rangers' advances[15] McLean's brother Tommy was appointed caretaker manager and four games passed before a permanent manager was in position.
On 10 November1983, Jock Wallace was persuaded by the Rangers board to leve Motherwell
and return to the club. His aim was to restore the glory years of the
treble-winning sides of the late 1970s. Wallace's initial impact was
positive, the club did win a trophy, the 1984 Scottish League Cup. It was a thrilling extra time victory over Celtic, with Ally McCoist getting a hat-tick, in a 3-2 win that won them the cup. The following season the league form remained indifferent.
The continuing dominance of the great Aberdeen side of the 1980s, coupled with a Dundee United and Celtic team that offered periodic challenges to Aberdeen's ascendancy, put Wallace under increasing pressure. By the 198586 season
Rangers had slipped to fifth place in the league and, with little
evidence of improvement since the Greig era, it was inevitable that
Wallace would be removed as manager. On 7 April1986, Wallace resigned as manager of the club. Perhaps, jump before being pushed by the newly appointed Rangers chairman David Holmes. Holmes had gone on record saying that the slump the club was in could not be allowed to go on.
Souness took advantage of the European competition ban imposed by UEFA on English clubs after the Heysel Stadium Disaster. Thanks to this and a sizeable tansfer kitty, he was able to attract the cream of English sides talent.[16] The first of many international players arrived in the shape of Chris Woods, followed by the likes of England deputy captain Terry Butcher. The 198687 season was the first in eight seasons that Rangers finished top of the Scottish Premier Division. Also during that season, goalkeeper Chris Woods set the British football shut out record of 1196 minutes. From November 26 1986, when he conceded a goal in a UEFA Cup 1-1 draw with Borussia Moenchengladbach, until 14 games later on January 30 1987 when Adrian Sprott of Hamilton Academical knocked the Rangers out of the Scottish Cup by a single goal.
Every year from 198889 season until the 199697 season, Rangers won
the league title. This 9 in a row achievement meant that they equalled
Celtic's record. The first three of these seasons the club was managed
by Graeme Souness, the later six under the stewardship of Walter Smith.
The Little General
Dick Advocaat
Dick Advocaat, nicknamed the Little General, succeeded Walter Smith on 1 June1998.
Advocaat, former manager of PSV Eindhoven, was only Rangers' tenth
manager and the first non-Scot to hold the position. He was given
resources on a scale never before handed to a Rangers manager but
success outwith Scotland failed to materialise, and the costly legacy
of Advocaat's time at Ibrox was a debt that would cripple the club for
years. He also spearheaded the building of Murray Park - a £14m training complex at Auchenhowie.
In total Advocaat spent over £36 million on new players in just his debut season. Some - the Dutch internationals Arthur Numan and Giovanni van Bronckhorst - were successful; others - Andrei Kanchelskis, Colin Hendry
- proved ineffectual. However, initially the big spending paid off. His
first season saw Rangers sixith domestic treble. In the following
season a domestic double was secured and in Europe there were signs of
greatly improved performance in the Champions League, as Parma were defeated en route to qualification for the group stages of the competition.
Rangers entered Advocaat's third season emboldened by the capture of
five of the six domestic trophies available in his first two years.
However, while the club again qualified for the Champions League group
stage, performances in the SPL began rapidly to disintegrate. Further
high-profile signings - Tore Andrι Flo for a club record £12 million, and the Dutch internationalist Ronald de Boer - could not reverse the decline. The club failed to win a major competition in the 200001 season,
as Celtic swept the domestic board. Advocaat resigned in the December
2001 to take up a position of director of football, which he would
leave after only 11 months.
The season started poorly for Rangers, with a number of losses and
draws against teams lower in the league, as well as their being knocked
out of the League Cup by Division One side St. Johnstone. Rivals Celtic built a lead at the top of the table, while Rangers fought for second place alongside Hearts and Aberdeen. The first Old Firm match of the season resulted in a 20 defeat; the second - at Ibrox - was a 11 draw.
In the UEFA Cup Rangers became the first Scottish side to qualify for the last 32 of the competition in its current format.
There had been rumours during the season of disharmony at Rangers,
between Scottish and foreign units, with players including captain Barry Ferguson disapproving of Le Guen's strict disciplinarian stance.[17] It was announced on 4 January 2007 that Le Guen had left Rangers by mutual consent.[18]
Walter Smith's return
On 10 January 2007, it was announced that former manager Walter Smith was the new manager of Rangers, with Ally McCoist as assistant manager and Kenny McDowall as first-team coach.[19]
The early season priority, qualification for the Champions League group stage was secured after aggregate victories over the champions of the Montenegrin and Serbian leagues, FK Zeta and Red Star Belgrade
respectively. The campaign started well for Rangers with two victories
but ultimately they did not progress from the group stages. But the
adventure continued as they progressed to the final of the UEFA Cup, defeating Panathinaikos, Werder Bremen, Sporting Lisbon and Fiorentina along the way. The final was against Zenit St. Petersburg who are managed by former Rangers manager Dick Advocaat. They lost that match 20, amid serious disturbances caused by some supporters. Video evidence was released by the Greater Manchester Police of Rangers fans attacking officers in Manchester city centre following the defeat.[20] An appeal was launched on Crimewatch in January 2009 in an attempt to trace 49 men in connection with the riots. [21]
The 200809 season saw Rangers make a below-par start to their UEFA Champions League
campaign, losing out in the knock-out stage to FC Kaunas of Lithuania.
The financial consequences of the failures to qualify for the Champions
League were revealed when the club posted a loss of £3.9m for the six
months to December 2008, and in March decided to offer staff the option
of voluntary redundancy as a way of cutting costs.[22] Despite a tight title race, on the final day of the league, Rangers managed to claim their 52nd league title. With their title success, Rangers gained automatic entry into next season'sChampions League group stage. Rangers won the Homecoming Scottish Cup for the 33rd time after defeating Falkirk 1-0 in the final, clinching a double in the process.
Club colours and crest
Crest worn from 19901994
The club colours of Rangers F.C. are royal blue, white and red.
The team's home strip invariably features a royal blue shirt (often
with white and/or red trim). Traditionally this is accompanied by white
shorts (often with royal blue and/or red trim) and black socks with red
turn-downs.[23]
However when wearing the 'home strip' Rangers will occasionally alter
the shorts and socks, sometimes replacing the black socks with white
ones; or replacing the white shorts and black socks combination with
royal blue shorts and socks.
The basic design of Rangers away strips has changed far more than
the traditional home strip. White and red have been the most common
predominant colours for Rangers alternate strips, though dark and light
blue have also featured highly.[24]
In recent years, Rangers have also introduced a third kit.[25]
This is usually worn if both the home and away kits clash with their
opponents. The colours used range from light blue to red to a very
controversial orange (called tangerine by the club).[26]
The club's most distinct rivalry is with Celtic, the other major
football club based in Glasgow; the two clubs are collectively known as
the Old Firm. Rangers' traditional support has largely come from the Protestant Unionist community.
During the late 19th century, many immigrants
came to Glasgow from Ireland. This was around the same time that both
Old Firm clubs were founded (Rangers in 1873 and Celtic in 1888).
Rangers came to be identified with the Scottish Protestant community.
Until Graeme Souness signed former Celtic player Mo Johnston, in 1989, Rangers were said by him to have had an "unwritten policy"[28] of not signing any player who was Catholic;[29] although Johnston was by no means the first Catholic to sign for the club,[30] he was the first openly Catholic, high-profile player to sign for them since World War I.[31]
In recent times, both Rangers and Celtic have taken measures to combat sectarianism. Working alongside the Scottish Parliament, church groups, pressure groups such as Nil by Mouth,
schools and community organisations, the Old Firm have endeavoured to
clamp down on sectarian songs, inflammatory flag-waving, and
troublesome supporters, using increased levels of policing and
surveillance.[32]
In 1999, Rangers' vice-chairman Donald Findlay was forced to resign after he was filmed singing sectarian songs[33] (The Billy Boys) at an event organised by a Rangers Supporters Club.
In 2002 the club dropped their controversial orange away strip after
a "furious debate over whether Rangers were profiting from their
sectarian overtones," though the club said their decision was "a
commercial decision, not based on politics. We change the shirt every
season with new designs to try to make it new and fresh."[34]
Anti-sectarianism campaigners and politicians had criticised the club's
decision to market an orange shirt, as the colour is associated with
the Orange Institution.
On 12 April 2006, following an investigation into the conduct of Rangers supporters at both legs of their UEFA Champions League tie against Villareal,
UEFA imposed a fine of £8,800 on Rangers following the improper conduct
of some of their supporters, notably the smashing of a window of the
Villarreal team bus at the second-leg match in Spain on 7 March.[35] However, UEFA declared the Rangers fans not guilty of alleged discriminatory chants.[35] UEFA challenged the ruling, and their Appeals Body partially upheld it,[36] fining the Ibrox club £13,500 and warning them as to their responsibility for any future misconduct.
On 9 June 2006, Rangers, in conjunction with representatives from
several supporters clubs, announced that they would comply with three
UEFA directives:
The club were "ordered to announce measurable targets in order to reduce sectarian behaviour amongst its supporters".
The club were "to control their anti-sectarian activities by
producing comprehensive statistics that are communicated to the public".
The club were "to make a public address announcement at every
official fixture, be it international or domestic, stating that any
sectarian chanting and any form of the song The Billy Boys is strictly prohibited".[37]
Despite these measures, UEFA again fined Rangers (12,000 Euros)
after some Rangers fans were filmed making sectarian chants and clashed
with riot police during their defeat by Osasuna in the UEFA Cup in 2007.[38][39]
Osasuna were fined 45,000 Euros for their failings in organising the
match and for their own supporters' behaviour. The Rangers Supporters
Association secretary indicated his belief that a small minority of
fans were to blame, suggesting "it doesn't matter how often they are
told [to stop sectarian chanting], some people will just not listen."[40] In September 2007, UEFA praised Rangers for the measures the club had taken against sectarianism.[41]
In 2008, Rangers fans' singing of the Famine song,
containing the lyrics "The famine's over now / Why don't you go home",
caused controversy. The football club urged fans to stop singing the
song, and warned they could be arrested for it.[42] Subsequently the song was condemned as racist by anti-racism group Show Racism the Red Card[43] and described as "vile, vicious and racist" by Celtic chairman John Reid[44] and complaints prompted Irish diplomats to contact the Scottish government.[45] The Rangers Supporters Trust
(RST), however rejected claims that the song was racist, saying :
"Racism is not a wind-up, however distasteful, aimed at Scottish Celtic
fans".[46]
In November 2008, a fan was found guilty of a breach of the peace (aggravated by religious and racial prejudice) by singing the Famine song during a game on 9 November against Kilmarnock.[47] In February 2009, sectarian chanting by some Rangers fans during an Old Firm match at Celtic Park was reported to the SPL by the match delegate, again relating to the chanting of the Famine Song.[48]
Both the club and its fans are disparagingly nicknamed Huns by some fans of other teams.[49][50][51][52][53][54][55] The Rangers Supporters Trust, in their statement defending singing of the Famine Song, described the nickname as "sectarian abuse".[46] The anti-sectarian charity Nil By Mouth also considers "Huns" to be a sectarian insult.[56]
In 2008, a Celtic fan was convicted of a religiously aggravated breach
of the peace for wearing a t-shirt with the slogan "dirty horrible
huns".[57]
Rangers' efforts to eliminate sectarianism
In recent times, both Rangers and Celtic have taken measures to combat sectarianism. Working alongside the Scottish Parliament, church groups, pressure groups such as Nil by Mouth,
schools and community organisations, the clubs have worked to clamp
down on sectarian songs, inflammatory flag-waving, and troublesome
supporters, using increased levels of policing and surveillance.[32]
In August 2003 Rangers launched its 'Pride Over Prejudice' campaign
to to promote social inclusion, which has urged fans to wear only
traditional Rangers colours and avoid offensive songs, banners and
salutes. This involved publishing the 'Blue Guide', known as the "Wee
Blue Book", which contained a list of acceptable songs and was issued
to 50,000 supporters in August 2007.
In 2005, Rangers Football in the Community partnered with Celtic to
form the 'Old Firm Alliance', an initiative aimed at educating children
from across Glasgow about issues like healthy eating and fitness, as
well as awareness of anti-social behaviour, sectarianism and racism.
The club's 'Follow With Pride' campaign was launched in 2007 to
improve the Rangers' image and build on previous anti-racist,
anti-sectarian campaigns.[58][59]
Rangers have a Sectarianism and Racism Monitoring Committee, which
reports to the club's board on club policy relating to sectarianism,
racism and equality. The club, through the Rangers Study Centre, is
also involved in the "Ready To Learn" project, along with Glasgow City
Council. The aims of the project include raisng awareness of
sectarianism, racism and prejudice among young people in Glasgow.
In 2006 William Gallard, UEFA's Director Of Communications, commended the SFA and Scottish clubs, including Rangers, for their actions in fighting discrimination.[60] Further, in September 2007, UEFA praised Rangers for the measures the club had taken against sectarianism.[41]
The club used a variety of grounds in Glasgow as a venue for home
matches in the years between 1872 and 1899. The first was Flesher's
Haugh, situated on Glasgow Green, followed by Burnbank in the Kelvinbridge area of the city, and then Kinning Park for ten years from the mid-1870s to the mid-1880s. From February of the 188687 season, Cathkin Park was used until the first Ibrox Park, in the Ibrox
area of south-west Glasgow, was inaugurated for the following season.
Ibrox Stadium in its current incarnation was originally designed by the
architect Archibald Leitch, a Rangers fan[61] who also played a part in the design of, among others, Old Trafford in Manchester and Highbury in London. The stadium was inaugurated on 30 December 1899, and Rangers defeated Hearts 31 in the first match held there.
Since 1899, two major disasters have taken place at the stadium. The first occurred in 1902 during a Scotland vs England
international match, when a section of terracing collapsed, leading to
the deaths of 26 people and over 500 injuries. The second disaster took
place in 1971, during the traditional New Year's Day Old Firm match-up.
As the crowd were leaving the match, barriers on the stairway to the
rear of passageway 13 at the Copland End collapsed, causing a crush and
resulting in the deaths of 66 people, with over 200 injuries. This led
to a major redevelopment of Ibrox, overseen by the general manager Willie Waddell, including its conversion to an all-seater stadium. Ibrox was awarded UEFA five-star stadium status, now obsolete.[62]
Rangers' under-19 team warming up at Murray Park before a game
The stands in Ibrox are: The Bill Struth
Main Stand (south; three tiers; the top one known as the Club Deck),
Govan Stand (north; two tiers), and the Copland (east) and Broomloan
(west) Stands (both two tiers), which are behind the goals. In addition
to these, there are also the East and West Enclosures (in the lower
tier of the Main Stand), and the two corners adjacent to the Govan
Stand are filled in. As a result of work completed in the summer of
2006 to make the Bar 72 area situated in the Govan Stand, the total
capacity of Ibrox is 51,082.[2] On 22 August 2006, Rangers announced that the Main Stand would be renamed The Bill Struth Main Stand in September 2006 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the death of their former manager, who served Rangers for 34 years.[63]
There are currently plans underway for a redevelopment of Ibrox stadium
which could result in Ibrox being rebuilt as a 70,000 seated stadium -
which would make it the second largest club football stadium in Britain
after Old Trafford.
The official Rangers Website was quoted as saying: "We are analysing
three strategies which would enhance the development of the existing
outline planning proposals for the Hinshelwood area to the south of the
stadium. One of the strategies includes the total rebuilding of Ibrox
Stadium while retaining the brick facade, the tradition and the
integrity of the Bill Struth Main Stand".[64]
Rangers training facility is located in Auchenhowie, near Milngavie in Glasgow. The facility is known as Murray Park after chairman Sir David Murray. It was proposed by then-manager Dick Advocaat
upon his arrival at the club in 1998. It was completed in 2001 at a
cost of £14-million. Murray Park is the first purpose-built facility of
its kind in Scotland, and incorporates features including nine football
pitches, a state of the art gym, a hydrotherapy
pool, and a video-editing suite. Rangers' youth teams are also
accommodated at Murray Park, with around 140 players between under-10
and under-19 age groups using the training centre.[65] Various first-team players have come through the ranks at Murray Park, including Alan Hutton, Chris Burke, Stevie Smith, John Fleck and Charlie Adam.
International club teams playing in Scotland, as well as national
sides, have previously used Murray Park for training, and Advocaat's South Korea team used it for training prior to the 2006 FIFA World Cup.