
Rangers v Aberdeen: Team news
Rangers midfielder Ianis Hagi will miss the last three games of the season with an injury picked up against Celtic last week but Robin Propper has returned to training.Ridvan Yilmaz and Dujon Sterling (Achilles) are out for the season while Tom Lawrence has been absent recently.Aberdeen defenders Alexander Jensen and Kristers Tobers are back in training. Ester Sokler (leg), Sivert Heltne Nilsen (eye) and Vicente Besuijen (knee) remain sidelined.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Why the Scottish Football Museum is one of the world's best
May 1976, Scotland v England at Hampden Park. In the 49th minute, with the score 1-1, Joe Jordan rampages down the left wing and crosses to Kenny Dalglish. As a nation holds its breath, Dalglish shimmies past an England defender and fires a shot. To everyone's surprise, the normally reliable Ray Clemence lets the ball slip between his legs and trickle into the net. From Kirkwall to Kirkcudbright, Scots respond with the kind of collective roar usually reserved for the likes of Bannockburn. This seminal moment in sporting history is played endlessly in a video loop at the Scottish Football Museum at Hampden, which Live Football Tickets has just named the third best football museum in Europe. Bettered only by museums in Greece and Serbia, the Hampden museum was streets ahead of the National Football Museum in Manchester, which limped in at ninth. Another historic win for Scotland. For the full Hampden experience, the museum manager, Andy Kerr, leads hour-long tours behind the scenes, through players' and match officials' dressing rooms and into the tunnel leading to the pitch, followed by as long as visitors like in the museum. • Scottish Football Museum honours women's game The original Hampden was built in 1903, and three decades later a world record crowd of 149,415 crammed in to watch Scotland beat England 3-1. It was demolished in the 1990s to make way for a downsized modern stadium. The dressing rooms are smart and functional rather than luxurious, allowing players representing club or country to focus on what they are here for. But they are helped to feel at home with national and club emblems on the walls of their respective rooms. The atmospheric climax is walking through the tunnel towards the Hampden Roar, which must make a few hairs rise. I can only imagine the thrill. Every year two teams emerge hoping to win the oldest association football trophy in the world, the Scottish Cup, which has pride of place in a glass case here at the museum. It is a handsome trophy crafted by silversmiths in 1873 for 56 pounds, 7 shillings and 11 pence, now estimated to be worth an eye-watering £1 million. For this reason it never leaves the stadium. After being presented to the winning team and paraded in a victory lap, it is returned to the museum for safekeeping and the team is given a replica. The stars of the collection are undoubtedly the portraits of dozens of players, managers and personalities. Dalglish is prominent among them, along with Denis Law, 'Slim Jim' Baxter, Graeme Souness and Alex Ferguson. • Five of the best heritage museums in Scotland There are surprising names among lesser-known lights of the game, notably Robert Smyth McColl, who scored a hat-trick in a 4-1 victory over England in 1900. He became known as 'Toffee' Bob a year later when he founded a newsagent with his brother. There was also a licensed-to-kill secret agent by the name of James Bond, aka Sean Connery, who played for Bonnyrigg Rose juniors for a couple of seasons in the 1950s. 'Big Tam' is remembered for a fashionable brown corduroy jacket and an entourage of doe-eyed local girls, though he was offered a trial by the Manchester United manager Matt Busby, which he wisely declined for an acting career. A set of 1903 iron and wood turnstiles leads to a motley collection of historic football strips, medals, posters and clunky leather boots that look as if they were designed for coalminers. Speaking of which, the exhibition From Pit to Pitch: A Story of Coal Seams & Football Dreams, running until the end of the year, investigates the mining communities across central Scotland that incubated great footballers and managers, including Bill Shankly, Jock Stein and Busby. One exhibit brought back fond memories of my early career as a trainee sports reporter, showing a section of the old press box with a phone booth that adorned the roof of the old stadium. I still remember climbing a spiral iron staircase and the smell of an old wooden corridor leading to our eyrie overlooking the field of dreams and much of Glasgow, as far as Ben Lomond. The thunderous roar of the crowd still rings in my ears. Entry to the Scottish Football Museum is £8 for adults and £3 for children; entry plus stadium tour costs £16/£9 (


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Josh Smith stars as Rangers stay hot, stifle White Sox
June 14 - Josh Smith homered and scored all three runs for Texas as the surging Rangers defeated the Chicago White Sox 3-1 on Friday in the opener of a three-game series in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers won for the fifth time in their past six games while Chicago dropped its third straight. Texas got on the board in the first inning as Smith led off with a single, advanced to third on a hit by Wyatt Langford and scored on a sacrifice fly to left field by Corey Seager. Smith added to the lead in the third with a leadoff home run into the Rangers' bullpen in right-center field. Texas pushed the margin to 3-0 in the fifth as Marcus Semien doubled home Smith, who had walked to start the inning. The White Sox pulled to within 3-1 in the seventh as a double by Luis Robert Jr. off reliever Hoby Milner plated Miguel Vargas, who had singled. Texas, down a starter with Nathan Eovaldi on the shelf with elbow inflammation, employed a bullpen game. Shawn Armstrong started and went three perfect innings, striking out five of the nine batters he faced. Jacob Webb (4-3) was second to the mound, allowing one hit while striking out one in two innings. Webb was followed by Luke Jackson (one hit and a strikeout in one inning) and Milner, who allowed one run on three hits in one-third of an inning and left with runners on second and third. Chris Martin took over and struck out Brooks Baldwin and coaxed Michael A. Taylor into a flyout to end the White Sox threat. Cole Winn pitched a perfect eighth and Robert Garcia worked around a leadoff double by Andrew Benintendi and two walks in the ninth to earn his fifth save. The White Sox managed just six hits -- two by Robert. Former Texas farmhand Adrian Houser (2-2) started for Chicago and went five innings, allowing three runs on six hits and four walks with two strikeouts. --Field Level Media


BBC News
7 hours ago
- BBC News
Scotland players fear losing contracts after World Cup
More than half of Scotland women's squad fear being left without a professional contract and having to hunt for work after this summer's Rugby World Cup, a squad representative has claimed.A two-page statement sent to BBC Sport says only 15 members of the 38-player training squad are on year-long deals with Scottish could mean a number of the 23 who have been put on short-term arrangements will be looking for new employment and experiencing off-field upheaval by source claims that some players in the Rugby World Cup training camp are continuing to "suffer with their mental and emotional health following the potential loss of their contracts" as they prepare for the tournament, which is being hosted by added it was "not conducive" to "a positive performance environment within a squad".Scottish Rugby says it extended contracts to October to give players certainty for the event, which runs from 22 August to 27 added it had not yet confirmed which players would be offered contracts beyond October but intended to sort that in the coming weeks. The national body added: "Scottish Rugby has committed to providing confirmation of what the high-performance programme will look like by the end of June, at which time the players will be advised of the next steps in the contracting process, with individual meetings scheduled, and contracts concluded, in July ahead of the Rugby World Cup."In 2022, Scottish Rugby announced, external that 28 players would be offered professional remains unclear how many players beyond the 15 already on 12-month contracts will be offered new deals by the end of the of the Scotland training squad also have contracts with their club sides, the majority of which are PWR sides in that league does pay its players, it is not a professional league and most players combine playing with jobs or some Scotland players are not offered contracts beyond October, the source claims they will be left "job hunting or doing interviews during pre-season and during the World Cup".A group of players are understood to have approached the Women's Rugby Association (WRA) for advice. The WRA supported the Wales Women in 2024 following a long-running contract dispute with the Welsh Rugby approached by the BBC, the WRA was unable to confirm its position on representing the Scotland Scotland women do have some representation from the Rugby Players Scotland union, but a spokesperson confirmed that it only involves matters in the "collective interest" - for instance, agreeing a maternity policy for players. This does not currently include any individual contract Players Scotland told BBC Sport: "Rugby Players Scotland are working with our members to develop the collective interests of professional women's rugby in Scotland in collaboration with Scottish Rugby."Scotland's women are in pre-season training ahead of the Rugby World Cup in England. They play Wales in Manchester, in their opening Pool B game, on Saturday, 23 August.