Ibrox Noise
·18 octobre 2025
Kevin Muscat is on a Rangers hiding to nothing already

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Yahoo sportsIbrox Noise
·18 octobre 2025
Rangers fans are bracing themselves for another uneasy chapter as Kevin Muscat edges closer to the Ibrox hot seat. The mood across the fanbase is mixed. Many see Muscat as the right man to restore authority and discipline. Others feel it will not matter who takes charge if the real problems above him remain untouched. Behind the scenes, Kevin Thelwell and Patrick Stewart still hold power, and that reality casts a long shadow over what should be a fresh start.
Rangers supporters have seen this all before. The club talks about new eras and bright ideas, but every manager ends up wrestling with the same internal mess. Decisions from above keep derailing progress on the pitch. Kevin Thelwell’s record in recruitment has been poor. The signings have lacked quality, leadership, and identity. The team looks like a collection of mismatched players without purpose. Meanwhile, Patrick Stewart continues to act like a man without a plan. He talks about structure and stability, yet Rangers remain anything but stable.
Muscat is an intense character. He demands respect and has shown tactical awareness in his work abroad. However, even he cannot rebuild Rangers while working under the same flawed hierarchy. Thelwell’s control over recruitment means Muscat may never get the players he truly wants. That is a recipe for conflict. We saw it with previous bosses who tried to implement their vision, only to be undercut by poor signings and muddled direction from the top. Without real authority, Muscat will end up as another name in a long list of managers who promised a revolution but delivered frustration.
Rangers fans are desperate for leadership that values the club’s identity. They want men who understand what it means to play for and represent this institution. The patience of the support is wearing thin. The banners and protests are no longer just about performances or results. They are about mistrust in the boardroom. As long as Kevin Thelwell and Patrick Stewart remain, Rangers risk repeating the same pattern. A new manager alone cannot change the direction of a sinking ship if those steering it refuse to learn from failure.
Even Sky Sports confirm Muscat’s move is close, but that will not be enough. Muscat might be brave enough to take the job, but bravery is not enough. If the hierarchy does not change, his impact will be limited before a ball is even kicked. Rangers need a clear-out above all else. Until that happens, no amount of passion or pedigree will bring the glory days back to Ibrox.