The worst boss revealed as Rangers’ recent managers ranked by overall win percentage | OneFootball

The worst boss revealed as Rangers’ recent managers ranked by overall win percentage | OneFootball

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Ibrox Noise

·28 avril 2025

The worst boss revealed as Rangers’ recent managers ranked by overall win percentage

Image de l'article :The worst boss revealed as Rangers’ recent managers ranked by overall win percentage

Rangers FC has been on quite the journey with its managers over recent years. Looking at their win percentages reveals some surprising—and not so surprising—moments. Let’s start with Pedro Caixinha. He managed a respectable 54% win rate. Not earth-shattering, true, but certainly solid enough to give the fans hope, and that’s what they had during his time in charge. His was the sort of middling performance that didn’t set the fans alight but also kept them from having a meltdown. And they say that consistency is everything in this sport, don’t they? That’s where Pedro had them; he had the moments when everything looked like it might be all right again.

And what about Murty, you ask? Well, here’s a man who managed an exact 50% win rate. Talk about living on a knife edge! For every game he won, there was another he didn’t. It’s like flipping a coin and having it come up heads or tails an equal number of times. This is the kind of thing that must have driven Rangers fans wild when they were recounting the Murty years. They must have felt not only halfhearted but also half-mad when watching the team play under this man’s management and when remembering what it was like to watch their beloved team, now reduced to these halfhearted performances.


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We also have Murty’s other spell standing at a 62% win rate. That’s a number that jumps out at you, like a well-timed run into the box, and certainly bring something to this Rangers story.

Then we’ve got Pedro Caixinha, who hangs around a 51% win rate. Once again, the win-loss-draw column puts him just a little above the surface in this ocean of statistics. His tenure might have had moments when everything came together perfectly, and he might have even enjoyed a couple of those memorable “I was there” kinds of days. But overall, it felt like he was still finding his way. And when you’re managing a club as historic and large as Glasgow Rangers, you don’t get too many chances to find yourself.

Beale’s entrance onto the scene shakes things up dramatically; he’s rocking a 72% win rate. Now we’re comically in the kind of territory that justifies speaking of “pedigree” and “heritage.” Any manager who can achieve that kind of success is doing something right. Even the bitterest of rivals have to begrudgingly admit that the man is getting results, and his methods are clearly working. After all, you don’t win nearly three-quarters of your matches by accident, and if you can evoke that kind of consistency at a club like Rangers, you’re deserving of more than just a bit of applause.

Still, the story doesn’t finish here—Gio (Giovanni van Bronckhorst) brings with him a healthy 62% win rate. The Dutchman appears to have imbued the Rangers with a continental elegance. They’re not simply finding ways to win. In the absence of that, at least, they’re playing attractive football. And in a game where the idea is to win as many (clean) sheets as possible, the Rangers are doing it with style. Fans love seeing their team win. But they especially love it when their team wins while still playing attractively.

Clement has achieved a 64% win rate, a testament to the tactical discipline he instills in his players and to keeping them motivated, especially in the relentless heat of the Glasgow football scene. The numbers tell us that he finds ways to get results even when games perhaps aren’t going to plan, and that is the hallmark of any top-level coach.

But what about Ferguson? He has a 36% win rate, and it’s hard not to wonder what kind of uphill battles he’s been fighting. After all, when you win fewer than four of every ten matches, it’s not long before questions start flying with more frequency than Alfredo Morelos’ boots hit a penalty area. Has he been dealing with some difficult circumstances—perhaps inheriting a problematic situation? But then Clement before him with this same mess had 64%…

In recent times, the managers at Rangers Football Club have had widely differing win percentages. These are not just numbers; they are tales of hope, dashed or fulfilled, and aptitudes in the alchemy of forming a winning team. They are stories dealing with the pressure of managing a club that is perennially hungry for a semblance of success.

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