Win over Hearts a mere âstay of executionâ for Rangers boss Clement?
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Philippe Clementâs side bounced back from their shock Scottish Cup exit
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Philippe Clement put the 3-1 win over Hearts, which eased some of the pressure on the Rangers manager, down to having âthe right mentalityâ.
But the Belgian probably has as much to thank goalkeeper Jack Butland, a fair share of luck and the shins of home centre-half Jamie McCart for Rangers leaving Tynecastle with all three points.
And the display did little to change the minds of pundits who were surprised to see Clement still in the dugout after the shock Scottish Cup defeat by Queenâs Park â and who regard it as a mere âstay of executionâ for the 50-year-old.
Hearts not only scored two of Rangersâ three goals â deflections off the unfortunate McCart â but created the majority of the gameâs chances as home head coach Neil Critchley was left âscratching my headâ at the scoreline.
So what does it mean for Clement and Rangers?
âRangers showed right mentalityâ
In the end, Rangers returned to being 13 points behind Scottish Premiership leaders and reigning champions Celtic, who continued their winning streak by easing aside Dundee United on Saturday.
Clement insisted âeverybody saw the reactionâ of his players at Tynecastle to a cup exit that had left everyone at Ibrox âdevastatedâ.
âThe team showed the right mentality as a group,â he said, adding they showed the âfightâ necessary for any team to win at Tynecastle.
âAlso against a Hearts team that went full-in for the victory with an offensive playing style, a lot of attacking players with good quality, and the team dug in and took also the right moments.â
Clement pointed out John Souttar and Cyriel Dessers both had goals ruled out for offside but admitted the teamâs performance was not âtop quality like in our best gamesâ.
Shortly before a flurry at the end of the first half, Rangersâ expected goals statistic was stuck at zero despite leading through McCartâs first own goal. And even by the final whistle, their 1.61 was well short of Heartsâ 2.91.
No wonder Critchley could claim 3-1 was not âa fair reflection of the game at allâ.
âItâs not often you play Rangers and you have more of the ball, more passes, better chances, more shots â and weâve done all of that today, yet weâve lost,â the Englishman said.
Striker Elton Kabangu was left disappointed not to add to his five goals in four games since joining on loan from Union St-Gilloise, which Critchley put down to some fine saves from the âmagnificentâ Butland.
âSurprised he was still in the dugoutâ
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Elton Kabangu was denied by several fine saves from Jack Butland
Hearts strike legend John Robertson rued his former sideâs missed chances.
âKabangu had six or seven opportunities,â he said on BBC Sportsound. âHearts missed three or four sitters. Butland has had four or five good saves â some magnificent.â
Former Hearts and Rangers midfielder Derek Ferguson could not âquite believeâ what he was watching.
âThe amount of absolute sitters Hearts have missed,â he said. âIâve watched numerous Hearts v Rangers games and I canât remember Hearts making so many chances against Rangers.
âRangers are a shambles from corner kicks and set-pieces against them. On another day, they could have conceded quite a few goals. Theyâve got away with one this afternoon.â
Rangers have now won five league games in a row, their longest run since winning nine last January-February.
However, although they also ended Heartsâ nine-game unbeaten run, former Ibrox youth striker Rory Loy thought it was only âa big winâ and âimpressive based on the poor standards they have setâ.
âFive wins in a row should happen numerous times throughout a season if you are looking to achieve your goals and, historically, Rangers have been able to do that,â he said.
Loy thinks Clement might still need to win the Europa League to save his job come the end of the season given they had never lost to a second-tier side at home in the cup and are highly unlikely to catch Celtic in the league.
âI canât help but feel it is a stay of execution for Clement,â he said. âWinning the Europa League might change things, but domestically thereâs nothing to grasp on to.
âI was very surprised he was in the dugout today based on last week. I just think it is kicking the can down the road a little bit.â
Clement had left last weekâs meeting with chief executive Patrick Stewart still believing he had the backing of the board, but Loy thinks sticking with the Belgian until the end of the season âbreeds negativityâ among the players and fans.