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(until 1 October) Philippe Clement (from 15 October) Stadium: Ibrox Stadium: Scottish Premiership: 2nd: Scottish Cup: Runners-up: League Cup: Winners: Champions League: Play-off round: Europa League: Round of 16: Top goalscorer: League: James Tavernier (17) All: James Tavernier (24) Highest home attendance: 50,936 vs Celtic 7 April 2024: Lowest ...
Rangers; 2024–25 season; Chairman: John Bennett (until 14 September) John Gilligan (from 14 September until 16 December 2024) Fraser Thornton (from 16 December 2024)
9 October 3 years May 2025 [66] 60 DF: Connor Allan 18 9 October 3 years May 2025 [67] 65 DF: Jack Harkness 18 7 December 3 years May 2025 [68] 59 GK: Jacob Pazikas 17 10 January 2 years May 2025 [69] 87 DF: Leyton Grant 16 10 January 1 year May 2024 [69] 86 FW: Findlay Curtis 16 10 January 1 year May 2024 [69] 74 DF: Jamie Newton 17 10 January ...
The 1989 Scottish League Cup final was played on 22 October 1989 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 44th Scottish League Cup competition (Skol Cup). The final was contested by Aberdeen and Rangers for the third season in succession, with Rangers winning the previous two. Aberdeen won the match 2–1 thanks to a Paul Mason ...
The 1963 Scottish League Cup final was played on 26 October 1963 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and it was the final of the 18th Scottish League Cup competition. The final was contested by Rangers and Morton, and Rangers won by a score of 5–0. [1] [2]
The 1975 Scottish League Cup final was played on 25 October 1975 and was the final of the 30th Scottish League Cup competition. It was contested by the Old Firm rivals, Rangers and Celtic . Rangers won the match 1–0, with the only goal scored by Alex MacDonald .
Rangers played a total of 51 competitive matches during the 1973–74 season. This was the club's centenary season, however, the start to the league championship was poor with no goals in the first four home games which left the side with just seven points from their first six league matches.
In 2001–02, Rangers quickly dropped into the secondary competition and survived a late missed penalty to overcome Paris Saint-Germain [12] (whose team included future Ballon d'Or winner Ronaldinho and Mikel Arteta who would soon move to Glasgow); they were knocked out by the eventual winners Feyenoord, inspired by former Celtic striker Pierre ...