Articles

Ibrox fans are condemned to more of Mad Phil and his Death of a Thousand Cuts.

|
Image for Ibrox fans are condemned to more of Mad Phil and his Death of a Thousand Cuts.
Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images

On Saturday, 21 November 2020, I had one of my worst moments supporting the club, probably since the 90s. We were 2-0 down at Easter Road in a month where we were floundering, clearly headed for some sort of total disaster, in a season that was already unravelling.

The two-goal deficit wasn’t unexpected. Something like this had been coming. Many of us had already grown tired of the excuses being made for Lennon and wanted to see the situation brought to a head.

The 10-in-a-row campaign could have been saved at that point, but even then, a lot of us doubted that it would be. We were more focused on what state we’d be in the following season if action wasn’t taken swiftly to put us in the best possible position for rebuilding.

The 2-0 result I could have handled. What happened in the last 11 minutes of that game profoundly disturbed me—not only because it happened, but because of how I felt about it. We turned the game around, snatching an equaliser deep into injury time. Diego Laxalt scored the goal.

The 2-2 draw allowed Lennon to get in front of the media and praise the spirit and determination of the team. And I knew then that disaster had only been postponed. Worse, I knew that the disaster was now likely to be several orders of magnitude bigger because the crisis had been averted that afternoon. I didn’t have to wait long to be proven right.

Sparta Prague had already beaten us 4-1 at home in the Europa League. Days after that 2-2 draw, we went to the Czech Republic and lost 4-1 again. But that was nothing compared to the shockwaves that were sent through the club by what came next—the home cup knockout against Ross County, which demolished any lingering hopes of a successful season and sparked an outpouring of public anger from fans… and this at a time when the country was in lockdown.

That day at Easter Road, watching the game, I felt that the club was caught in a doom spiral. I thought we were in real trouble. I thought the campaign had already started to come apart. Lennon had thrown the whole team under the bus weeks before, and there was just this overwhelming sense of doom hanging over everything. That afternoon could have brought matters to a head. In hindsight, it wouldn’t have—but it would have ripped the blindfolds off for a lot of people before the events that followed.

Watching the Ibrox club absolutely toiling today, having spent most of the game under the cosh against Hearts, yet coming out with a 3-1 victory that will allow Clement to bait his critics and claim that a corner has been turned, I know that their support is feeling the same profound sense of despair I felt that afternoon when Diego Laxalt smashed the ball into the net. This should be over. And yet, it’s going to go on and on.

And let’s state the obvious—they’re in a much worse position now than we were then. Theoretically, at the time of the Hibs game, that draw kept us in the title race. We were well behind in the league, but we had two games in hand. If we’d won them, the gap would have been cut to just five points.

Of course, you can tell by watching your team whether they’re capable of overturning that kind of margin, and I knew we weren’t. I knew we weren’t in a good place. But the opportunity was still there. We hadn’t quite thrown it away yet.

Eight days later, with the League Cup exit confirmed and another two points dropped in the league just around the corner, the sense of a doomed season had properly set in across the wider support. But we still had competitions to play for.

The Ibrox club now doesn’t. And so listening to James McFadden and others trying to spin today’s result into a significant win—when it was nothing of the sort—is hilarious. But not for Ibrox fans.

Anyone watching that game today with enough detachment knows that on another day, they might have taken an absolute hiding from Hearts.

Hearts were the better side for most of the game until the self-inflicted injury of the third goal—the second own goal of the game from James McCart. When you’re relying on two own goals to survive a potentially disastrous result, you’re riding your luck. And luck is all that’s keeping Philippe Clement afloat right now.

I’m not even going to get into the performance of the officials, particularly those on VAR. I’ll let that be picked over in the aftermath and await Willie Collum’s inevitable statement of apology to Hearts for the penalty they should have had in the lead-up to Ibrox’s second goal. Because it was a penalty—blatantly so.

How that wasn’t even reviewed a second time by John Beaton, I do not know. I do know why he didn’t spot it the first time, though.

For Ibrox fans who wanted a swift and sure end to their misery, today is a disaster. In a sense, it’s as bad as the result that knocked them out of the Scottish Cup last week. It’s a fig leaf for Park, Bennett, and their manager to hide behind.

It will allow them to continue making excuses. It will give Clement more time. And it will set up the next calamity to hit that club like a sledgehammer. Although nothing could possibly be as damaging as the Scottish Cup exit to Queen’s Park a week ago today.

I used to think, watching Michael Beale, that he looked like a guy who had been sitting down for dinner and, by some black magic, had suddenly found himself standing on a touchline in a tracksuit as the manager of the Ibrox club. He had that look on his face sometimes, like he wasn’t even sure how he got there. Clement had that same look today—a man who not only wished he were somewhere else but couldn’t believe where he was and had no idea how it had come to this.

I’ve seen managers get by on luck.

I’ve even seen managers turn their situation around based on luck. Sometimes, it’s better to be lucky than good. It’s a common thread in football history. A lot of managers have been saved by it. This guy won’t be.

Luck will not deliver him from the position he’s in now. And nobody watching that today could think he deserved a victory, far less the reprieve for another seven days—or however long it lasts.

And because I remember what it feels like to be physically sick when your team benefits from an enormous slice of good fortune, as we did that day at Easter Road, I know exactly how their fans feel this afternoon.

Those who went into this game hoping that the misery, pain, and certainty of further humiliation would be brought to a swift end—only to now have to endure it even longer. To be condemned to watching more of that shocking brand of what passes for football under that manager. To have to endure the suffering that comes with winning meaningless dead rubber games knowing it strengthens the manager’s hand, along with the inevitability of future defeats which you know in your heart are coming.

That hurts like hell. And I wouldn’t wish them anything else. I’m going to drink down their tears. I’m going to drink down their pain like it was the finest wine.

Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images

Share this article

8 comments

  • Kevcelt59 says:

    Everybody will have their own opinions about that result. In mine, it’s just typical of the hearts lot against them. And clemmont as usual, embarrassingly tryin tae make out that his team were equal, if not the better side again. Watches a completely different game tae everyone as usual. The guy is completely void of charisma and doesn’t have one shred of humility when it comes to his opponents. Would love it, if some team and I mean an spl team, took their chances and leathered his side by a large margin. See what he has tae say then. Preferably us, tho anybody would do. That would be a reaction worth seein.

  • wotakuhn says:

    Well written article that. Ah yes I remember it well. I didn’t want us to lose that day even to achieve the demise of Lennon’s reign. Just can’t want us to lose but I get the sentiment entirely.
    Also Kev I wish a club would give them a proper pumpin’ and I wish it was us, 5/6/7 or more would be great. What a lovely way to bring this successful season to conclusion aligned with the treble of course but and don’t know why; we never seem to

  • Lordmac says:

    Why are Celtic given the rangers 900 away tickets

  • Brattbakk says:

    The tribute act took an hour to have a shot, Hearts were by far the better team for the first hour missing chance after chance until there centre back twice fired into his own net and was only denied a hat trick by a brilliant save from Gordon. Sevco can’t take positives from that except the three points, there world class striker was a nonentity again. As for Beaton, shocking! Especially when it went 1-1, from that point on he gave everything to them.

  • Clachnacuddin and the Hoops says:

    I’m probably quite happy with that today…

    Keeps Fillipe Fillop in a job a bit longer which is awesome –

    Plus The Scumbos Support are as bad if not worse at times than The Sevco Hun Hoards…

    So puts them back in their box as well then…

    Cheatin Beaton and McLean still showing ‘who’s boss’ at subverting the rules with a whistle and a monitor…

    Will Collum throw them under a bus to ‘appease’ Heart of Midlothian FC the way that he does to appease Sevco FC…

    Will he Fuck !!!

  • Gerry says:

    If Hearts could have finished , then the game would have been over at half time.
    Fortunately for Sevco, the Hearts’ strikers had blindfolds on for 90 mins !
    Big Philipe is a haunted looking individual who doesn’t want to be there and waits, for his huge compensation payout ! HH

  • JimBhoyback says:

    100% penalty and Hagi was lucky to stay on the park.

    Cerny is their best player has been all season. They will need to fork out at Least £5m for his services, I cannot see that happen.

    They will be a different team next year as some move on but I am not sure they will be any better relying on some more loans, it’s all very short term, they will never get out the rut, their demanding fans will not allow 2-3 seasons to build and reduce debt for the longer term good.

    Get in that takeover team with Jillions to spend, that’s what the Klan want.

  • JimBhoyback says:

    Some speculation around that Clemente will be around for next season too… Just gets better.

Comments are closed.

×