Why ‘Felt 18’ Veteran Might Be Key To Rangers Defense After Gerrard Hands Him Debut

Rangers were in complete disarray when Steven Gerrard accepted the managerial role back in summer and assured the supporters of a better future ahead following a strong inception in early months. He focused on regrouping the backline with a string of defensive inclusions but must be worried of late as his side kept only a couple of clean sheets in last ten encounters.

Connor Goldson and Nikola Katic, both the new signings earned applauds initially as a resilient central defensive duo, but the latter eventually lost his place to Nottingham Forest loanee Joe Worrall due to a series of nervy appearances. Katic was brought back into action against Spartak Moskva where the Gers lost 4-3 despite leading thrice in the game, and his display failed to convince the gaffer yet again versus Motherwell which led to a half-time substitution with veteran Gareth McAuley.

McAuley, who will turn 39 in less than a month time is still going strong for Northern Ireland and showed great resilience and composure at the back versus the Steelmen in his side’s thumping 7-1 triumph. The former West Brom centre-back was introduced in the final seconds in Moscow, and the minutes against Motherwell handed him precious game-time since completing a Bosman move back in early September.

 “I still have the enthusiasm to do it. I like to train. Pulling up at Ibrox last weekend I felt like 18 instead of 38. As long as I feel fit and able to compete and able to train every day to the standard that’s needed, then I’ll continue to do it.”

The 6 ft 5 in defender did not hide his ecstasy after making his first real contribution for the club he used to support as a kid and the experience as well as discipline brought in by him helped the Gers to stretch the margin at the other end.

Goldson, a revelation in Rangers defence, looked worn out in recent fixtures and the ongoing break would allow him enough time to recover before a busy schedule ahead. The presence of McAuley as his central defensive partner should enhance his self-reliance due to the physicality and aerial supremacy the veteran offers inside the box. 

McAuley is hailed for his goal scoring trait from corners and indirect freekicks exhibited during his time in Premier League in Baggies colours and would be eyeing to replicate the same more often having a set-piece specialist in the form of James Tavernier.