RANGERS 4-1 FC KAUNAS

(Johnston, Albertz, Dodds 2)



It was the "Late Late Show" at Ibrox tonight as Rangers made desperately hard work of their European Champions Cup 2nd Round Qualifying tie with FDK Kaunas of Lithuania, the final scoreline of 4-1 being a misrepresentation of a game that was a Herculean struggle for the Light Blues.

Pre-match talk had been of the 3rd Round tie with Danish champions Herefolge, overlooking the fact that there was a second round tie to be won. Rangersı manager Dick Advocaat had warned that Kaunas were a physical side, and so it proved with the Lithuanians taking no prisoners from the first whistle.

Rangers team selection as something of a surprise for the 46,974 spectators with the inclusion of Claudio Reyna fresh from a World Cup Qualifying tie for the United States in Costa Rica not to mention Jonatan Johansson and Rod Wallace who had both been struggling with injuries.

An early gaol in such a tie is always priceless and Allan Johnston did the needful in 14 minutes with his first competitive goal for the club, slotting the ball home after a blocked Albertz drive had been laid into his path by Johansson.

Rangers went after a quick second and it should have arrived within two minutes with Johnstonıs right foot shot being parried by Kaunas goalkeeper Marius Poskus, Rod Wallace heading the rebound wide from right in front of goal.

That miss was to prove expensive in 26 minutes when a Scott Wilson error allowed Audrius Zuta to rifle the ball home, the loss of an away goal a blow to many who had turned up in anticipation of a hatful of goals.

Rangers strove to regain the initiative, a Fernando Ricksen shot from Johnston's cross being blocked by Darius Regelskis and Reynaıs effort from the Dutch fullbackıs cutback being saved saved by Poskus.

The first yellow card of the night duly arrived in 33 minutes when Vadim Petrenko was booked for a foul on Jorg Albertz - the German fortunate that his retaliatory reaction was ignored by Maltese referee Emanuel Zammit.

Rangers had a strong penalty appeal for handball against Tomas Kancelskis waived aside before Kaunas were reduced to ten men in 39 minutes when Petrenko was shown his second yellow card for yet another foul on Albertz and thus for the third consecutive year a visiting side to Ibrox in a European Qualifying Round tie had been reduced to ten men before the first half was out, following the example of PAOK and Parma.

Nevertheless the half finished in frustration for the home side with both Barry Ferguson and Scott Wilson booked for fouls on Zuta and Ksanavicius respectively.

Dick Advocaat has never been slow to act in such circumstances and this game was no exception, with two half time substitutions in the shape of Neil McCann and Billy Dodds replacing the ineffective Scott Wilson and Jonatan Johansson respectively, but the main talking point of the early stages of the second half was an amazing incident in 51 minutes when Regelskis was stretchered off after blocking an Albertz drive only to be physically removed from the stretcher and pushed back onto the pitch by his coach Senderas Desovilious who removed from his path a stretcher bearer in the process.

With an hour gone Rangers were struggling desperately to secure any kind of a lead to take to Lithuanian next week with the Kaunas defence rock-solid but in 62 minutes the Ibrox men were offered a lifeline out of the blue when a Reyna cross saw Poskus make his one mistake of the night, mishandling the ball then pulling down Craig Moore in an effort to retrieve the situation.

Jorg Albertz duly converted the penalty, burying the nightmare of his penalty misses of last season and within two minutes Rangers were facing just nine men when Neruss Barasa was red carded on the word of assistant referee Gaetano Degabriele - a decision which mystified almost everyone in the stadium.

Kaunus thus had the dubious distinction of being the first European side to be reduced to nine men at Ibrox Ankaragucu in 1973.

Advocaat went from broke when he substituted Kenny Miller for Tony Vidmar in 70 minutes as Rangers pounded the Lithuanian defence, Poskus defying Reyna and Dodds in quick succession before being yellow carded for time wasting in 76 minutes.

The minutes were ticking away as Rangers launched wave after wave of attacks against a heroic defence, but the Light Blues were facing a desperately perilous journey to the Baltic state next week with a precarious 2-1 lead before being thrown a lifeline with the addition of six extra minutes.

The glory of last years Champions League campaign had seemed a million miles way as the clock clicked to 90 minutes when Billy Dodds repaid his entire transfer fee with a priceless goal 26 seconds into in jury time when he wheeled on an Albertz pass to send a rocket shot into the roof of the net and for good measure added a fourth - again from an Albertz pass - with a low shot into the corner of the net.

Rangers manager Dick Advocaat declared that he was very pleased with the result but described the performance as very poor. His opinion was that Rangers were not ready for such a game, the team were simply not sharp enough. He had always expected Kaunas to be physical and also that they would tire towards the end. Asked if the 2-1 scoreline at 90 minutes would have been enough he replied that at 94 minutes the score was 4-1.

Drawing comparison with the tie with Shelbourne two years ago he had no doubts that the 4-1 lead would be enough for the trip to Lithuania, but promised changes in next weeks team.

Asked about a report in an Italian newspaper today that Rangers were on the verge of signing Ronaldo he confirmed that this was the case adding that both Batistuta and Zidane would also be joining the club.

One presumes that the Rangers manager was humouring the press. In a quite remarkable interview the Kaunas coach Senderas Desovilious described the mood of the team as good stressing that it showed that they can hold their own in the highest company - he was unhappy with the red cards - the first was undeserved the second he claimed to be unaware of what had happened.

Asked about the six minutes injury time he shrugged his shoulders ³we are younger brothers². Looking ahead to the second leg ³football is football - anything can happen² he stated before somewhat surprisingly offered the opinion that he would have been happy had the game finished at 3-1.

Desovilious confessed that he had been spoken to informally by the police at the end of the game regarding his alleged assault on one of the unfortunate stretcher bearers "There was incident with stretcher bearers. We are new in game and will make our own conclusions and ensure it does not happen again. The referee showed his incompetence by not objecting to my throwing my player physically off the stretcher onto the pitch. Everything is history now."

Thus Rangers have a healthy 4-1 lead for their first ever trip to Lithuania in seven days time, but it sure had been a long night.

RANGERS:- Klos, Ricksen, Moore, Wilson (McCann 45), Vidmar (Miller 70), Ferguson, Johnston, Reyna, Johansson (Dodds 45), Wallace, Albertz. SUBS NOT USED - Kanchelskis, Brown, Porrini, Ritchie.