I BELIEVE the mental health industry is in for a major boost in Scotland, as the long drawn-out Rangers take-over case continues. I can honestly see a lot of Bears with sore heads, requiring treatment, once the full details of the American buy-out are revealed.
Wee snippets are already coming out; with it being widely suggested that, if the American deal goes through, Rangers will effectively become a feeder team for Leeds United. If this happens, and at the moment it might well only be “paper talk”, but, should it come to pass, it will be a difficult decision for the wilder elements among “Ra Peepul” to get their heads around.
By every known measure, Rangers are a bigger club than Leeds, with a more-gilded escutcheon. However, they play in the comparative backwater of the Scottish Professional Football League, while, next season, United will be in the closest competition Football has to a licence to print money – the English Premiership.
Thus, in the pecking order beloved of North American sport – United play in a major league, Rangers in a minor one. Just how they will explain to there new American masters, that Rangers will be playing in Europe next season, while Leeds will not – now that will be an interesting conversation.
The other big as yet unanswered question of the take-over is: who will be Manager next season? Barry Ferguson's managerial record to date is far from stellar, but, I honestly believe, the only club he could ever commit to unreservedly is Rangers – technically, he may have his failings, but, as a motivator of Rangers' players, I feel the club would struggle to get as good as he and the current management team – all of whom know what is required to put a winning Rangers team on the park.
The fact is, unless they pay unreasonable wages, even our Big Two are going to struggle to recruit A-List, even B-List players. So they are recruiting C-Listers, who might, with the correct coaching and motivation evolve into B or A-Listers. Celtic have been doing this better than Rangers of late, but, the gap isn't that wide.
Back when I was involved in Scottish Basketball, just about every club had one or two imported Americans. These guys went through the motions in most games, only really stirring themselves for games with David Murray's MIM team. I see the same thing happening with some of the current Rangers' squad, only bursting a gut v Celtic or in Europe.
I have long maintained, both of our Big Two would be better off recruiting good native talent, guys who know what pulling on that strip means. I am sure, a Recruiting Scottish programme, backed-up by better coaching, would produce better results for both clubs.
And, if The Old Firm could show this strategy working, who knows, the diddy clubs might also lose this current fascination for hiring-in third or fourth rate non-Scots, to the overall betterment of Scottish Fitba.
EVERYONE HAS a team against which they judge all others. For generations even very-good Scotland sides were written-off as: “No a patch on the Wembley Wizards”. Then we beat reigning World Champions England in 1967, and the Mark Two Wizards became the benchmark.
It's the same at club level, for me, no Junior team will ever come close to: Jock Fraser; Davie Love, Charlie Cathie; Andy McEwan, Jim Baird, Jim Donnelly; Alex Bingham, Jim Collins, Alex Sharp, Hughie Neil and Eric Wilkie – the Lugar Boswell Thistle team which battled through 13 games to reach the 1956 Scottish Junior Cup Final. No we will not mention the result in that game, the start of a litany of Hampden Heartbreak for me.
When I moved on to following Senior football, the benchmark was set by the Kilmarnock team I followed: Jimmy Brown; Jim Richmond, Matt Watson; Frank Beattie, Willie Toner, Bobby Kennedy; Rab Stewart, Jackie McInally, Andy Kerr, Bertie Black and Billy Muir. I am not the only Rugby Parker of my vintage who will tell you, that team was better than the title-winning side of 1965, although one or two were in both teams.
OK, Jimmy Brown was bought from Hearts, Jim Richmond from Falkirk, Kerr from Manchester City, but the likes of Watson, Beattie, Kennedy, McInally, Black and Muir came through the ranks at Kilmarnock. Under Walter McCrae's firm hand, the club took many local kids and made them footballing men. The club had a great relationship with the local Kilmarnock Amateurs and Saxone clubs and if you were any good at all in the then flourishing schools football scene in Ayrshire, your name was on-file inside Rugby Park.
To be fair to current Manager Derek McInnes, the team he sent out to beat St Johnstone last weekend contained eight Scots – I firmly believe that ought to be the minimum required for the Scottish League. Five of the eight listed substitutes were also Scottish, so while some other Premier Division clubs are fielding virtual League of Nations XIs, Killie are giving Scottish talent a game, even if most of our Scots are from outwith Ayrshire.
But, the fact that the Killie Youth team beat Dundee in the Youth Cup final last week gives me a bit of hope, that some day, not too far ahead, we will again see a Kilmarnock team packed full of home-grown Ayrshire talent.
IN THE FEVERED world of English football writing, where people who can barely do joined-up writing, and certainly don't do joined-up thinking, the game throughout this season has been a twin-track one. When the fans with lap tops weren't speculating on exactly when Tottenham Hotspur would sack Big Ange, they were reporting on the latest catastrophe to befall Manchester United.
How delightful then, to those of us who love a bit of schadenfreu, to see “The worst-managed Spurs team ever” and the “Worst-ever Manchester United team” just 90 minutes away from an all-English European final. And, just for added fun, a Chelsea team which has also come in for huge criticism this campaign, is also looking good for another European final.