Rangers sack Clement following loss to St Mirren
Philippe Clementâs last interview as Rangers manager
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Rangers have sacked manager Philippe Clement following Saturdayâs home defeat by St Mirren, with the side 13 points behind Scottish Premiership leaders Celtic.
âThe club would like to put on record their sincere thanks to Philippe for his hard work and dedication during his spell in charge,â Rangers said.
âA further update from the club will follow in due course.â
The Belgian, 50, had been under pressure this season as his team struggled to match Celticâs consistency and this monthâs Scottish Cup loss at home to Queenâs Park increased supporter unrest.
Off the pitch, 49ers Enterprises are negotiating a potential takeover of Rangers, which could be completed between April and June.
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Published11 hours ago
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Published1 day ago
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Clement joined Rangers in October 2023 following Michael Bealeâs 10-month reign, soon winning the League Cup and leading the team to the top of the Premiership.
However, a poor record against Celtic contributed to missing out on last seasonâs league title and Scottish Cup.
This term, league defeats by Celtic, Kilmarnock, Aberdeen and St Mirren put Clement under scrutiny and Rangers missed out on another League Cup triumph by losing the final to Celtic on penalties.
Rangersâ league victory over Celtic at Ibrox in January temporarily eased the pressure but further dropped points at Hibernian and Dundee as well as this monthâs home losses ultimately sealed Clementâs fate.
After Hibs had beaten Celtic earlier on Saturday, St Mirrenâs win was their first at Ibrox since 1991 and came less than two weeks after Championship side Queenâs Park knocked Rangers out of the Scottish Cup.
Kilmarnock host Rangers in the Premiership on Wednesday (20:00 GMT), with Motherwell the Ibrox sideâs next visitors on Saturday (15:00).
Highlights: Rangers 0-2 St Mirren
In Europe, Clementâs record was competent, emulating last seasonâs achievement of reaching the last 16 of the Europa League and Jose Mourinhoâs Fenerbahce will meet Rangers over two legs in March for a place in the quarter-finals.
Last week, chief executive Patrick Stewart indicated the board were minded not to make a managerial change while Rangers maintained an interest in Europe.
âWe have been underperforming for several seasons now and thatâs not down to a manager,â he said. âWe have changed the manager and it has not made a difference.
âUntil we sort the root causes, then itâs akin to trying to fix a broken house and starting with the ceiling instead of starting with the foundations.
âFor all that the Queenâs Park result was disastrous, we do also have to give credit to Philippe and the team for the Europa League run. I donât want to take a step that would put further progress in the Europa League at risk.â
Clement exits after winning 55 of his 86 games in charge, drawing 16 and losing 15.
Turbulent period on and off pitch
Defeat at the qualifying stages of the Champions League in August had limited Clementâs summer transfer budget amid a worsening financial picture off the pitch.
Rangers announced a ÂŁ17.2m loss for the year to June, up ÂŁ4.1m from the previous accounting period, prompting a reduction to the first-team wage bill for this season.
Contrasted with three-in-a-row champions Celticâs ÂŁ13.4m profit, Rangersâ failure to reach the Champions League group stage last season or league phase this term was laid bare.
Former Club Brugges and Monaco boss Clement had earlier in the season signed a new deal until 2028, meaning Rangers face a managerial compensation pay-out for the third season running.
Indeed, Rangers are looking for their fifth permanent manager inside four years with neither Giovanni van Bronckhorst, Beale nor Clement able to put in a credible enough challenge to Celtic since Steven Gerrard won the Ibrox sideâs last league title in 2021.
In recent months, there have been boardroom changes at Ibrox, with Stewart joining from Manchester United and Fraser Thornton coming in as non-executive chairman.
The chief executive role had been vacant for around six months following James Bisgroveâs summer departure while John Gilligan was appointed interim chairman in September after John Bennett had stepped down on health grounds.
Stewart, in his interview with club media last week, stated Rangers were hoping to recruit a new sporting director, an appointment Clement later said he would not have a say in.