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Warburton II- Daily Mail reporter calls out bottler Beale as a lazy appointment

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For the second week running Gary Keown has highlighted and called out the contradictions of Micky Beale.

While most reporters and media outlets hang on every word from the Ibrox boss and publish without questioning or apparently thinking the Daily Mail columnist is detached enough to call it out as he sees it.

Beale has certainly changed his tune since inheriting the Europa League runners-up in November. There wasn’t much broken, things aren’t so bad was the message before a visit to Hampden resulted in Beale explaining the difference between revamp and rebuild.

Gary McAllister’s former bibs and cones man has been retreating big time over the last week, grabbing at ‘against the odds’ while hanging on to Celtic’s budget plans while he walked in on a squad recently refreshed by the arrivals of Rabbi Matondo, Antonio Colak, Ridvan Yilmaz, Ben Davies, Tom Lawrence and John Souttar.

With his brilliance on the training ground Beale was given all the tools to succeed but when it came to it he picked the wrong team, used the wrong tactics and made the wrong substitutions when he was presented with a trophy just 90 minutes away.

Reflecting on Beale’s u-turns and the harking back to the formation of the club in 2012, Keown explains to Daily Mail readers:

They’ve won a league since then against a Celtic set-up that imploded. They also reached a Europa League final. They banked Champions League money. Calvin Bassey raised £20million. Nathan Patterson went for £12m. Joe Aribo brought in funds and Aston Villa paid £4m-plus for Steven Gerrard and his team.

In the space of one week, though, Rangers have regressed six months. To a bleaker, hopeless time. To the beginning of September when the soporific Giovanni van Bronckhorst finally said something interesting and signed his death warrant — conceding, after a   four-goal hosing at Ajax, that the club couldn’t be asked to compete in Europe.

He had a point. It just sounds defeatist for a big-club manager to say that in public, though, and starts an unstoppable snowball of negativity rolling downhill.

Beale speaking midweek about the complexities of changing a squad with ‘not huge finance’ and ‘competing against the odds because we are not about to spend the same money (as Celtic)’ feels as bad. No matter his backtracking yesterday. 

This guy is already starting to come across a bit like Mark Warburton, who couldn’t understand why  people weren’t excited by competing with Hearts for second. And, be sure, coming across like Mark  Warburton is not good.

Back in September, Van Bronckhorst was talking about trying to match up to the likes of Liverpool, running wage bills in excess of £300m. Beale, in the short term, at least, only has to worry about  overhauling ‘the other mob’ across the Clyde.

In the last set of accounts,  Rangers had salary costs of nearly £55m. Although they don’t possess the same cash in the bank as the defending champions, they are very definitely in the same ballpark in terms of outlay on people and players.

So, why are they still miles behind, as witnessed in last weekend’s  surrender to Celtic in the Viaplay Cup final? Why are they still going with so many of the same old faces who have failed to turn up for big games so often?

Beale bottled it with his Hampden line-up, too — leaving out Nicolas Raskin and Todd Cantwell in favour of these guys — and looks less  convincing by the week. He was a lazy appointment. And the sorry way his move from QPR played out pointed to a lack of judgement  that cannot sustain a manager of  Rangers.

Beale’s next media appearance is expected on Tuesday to preview Wednesday’s game against Hibs with Nicolas Raskin and Todd Cantwell both expected to start.

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  • George Kerr says:

    Coach maybe, manager never. No depth in the squad. Lack of personality to offer players confidence. Too many old faces and hangers ons!

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