
‘It was complicated' – Rangers cult hero who turned down Celtic opens up on why he chose Ibrox
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
HE famously turned down Celtic to join Rangers - then scored six goals against the Hoops while playing for the Light Blues.
Rangers legend Nacho Novo had the choice of Glasgow's big two after a standout season in Scotland with Dundee.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
2
Nacho Novo loved playing for Rangers
Credit: Getty
2
But he could have opted to wear green and white instead
Novo, now 46, moved to Scotland in 2001 when his agent recommended a shock switch to Raith Rovers - despite Valencia also being on his trail.
After a season in Kirkcaldy he travelled up the A92 to Dens Park, before heading back down to Glasgow when Rangers came calling.
But while the Light Blues had him on their radar for some time, it was actually Martin O'Neill who made the first official approach.
Novo, however, only had Ibrox on his mind.
Speaking to the Let Me Be Frank podcast, Novo revealed: "I knew Rangers were interested in me for a while. I spoke to my agent, I knew there were a big club.
"It was complicated at the time because Dundee were entering administration so the chairman wanted to get as much money as possible, which is understandable.
"Celtic wanted to speak to me and they made me to go Celtic Park. They said there wasn't going to be any cameras, and of course the first thing I saw were cameras.
"I spoke with Martin O'Neill but Rangers were in for me for a long time, while Celtic hadn't been.
"I knew Mikel Arteta, I knew Ronald (De Boer), Shota (Arveladze) and Claudio Caniggia.
"I used to go to Glasgow for something to eat and things like that, so I had friends there (at Rangers) already.
Rangers fans react as 49ers takeover completed
"I knew I would feel more comfortable going there.
"I remember before that I went to the Scottish Cup final - Celtic vs Rangers - and I sat in the Rangers end when Fergie scored that free-kick.
"Being there and seeing the atmosphere, you can't beat that. I think it's the best derby in the entire world.
"I just got that feeling."
Novo spent six years in Glasgow and lifted the same number of trophies during that time.
He clinched the league and League Cup double in his first season under Alex McLeish.
Novo was Rangers' top goal scorer that campaign and he went on to score 70 goals for the club in total, leaving Ibrox in 2010 to head back to Spain.
Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

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


Daily Record
32 minutes ago
- Daily Record
The Rangers realisation that astounded Andrew Cavenagh as Dave King hopes board mood swings are now thing of the past
King reckons that now the grownups in charge, the boardroom moodswings that have plagued the club will become a thing of the past Say what you want about the men who've run Rangers for the past decade but you can't fault the devotion to a club most have supported since they were wearing short trousers. Around the boardroom, tens of millions have been poured into a passion first developed as children. The trouble is that much of those huge sums have been squandered by a series of blunders verging on the schoolboy. The job now for the new American regime in control at Ibrox is to return the Light Blues to the top of the class in Scotland. And if there's one thing offering re-assurance to Dave King, it's that the grown ups are now in charge. The former chairman was one of those boyhood supporters who gave his all - and most certainly his fortunes - in the pursuit of making Rangers great again. But having been born and raised in Glasgow, the Castlemilk native was as susceptible as any of the men he shared the director's table with of getting caught up amidst the reactionary mindset of the larger Ibrox faithful. He saw how a bad night in Perth or Paisley could lead to dire consequences for the manager in the dugout. But with the mature heads of Andrew Cavenagh and his partners from 49ers Enterprises now in charge, King hopes the days of boardroom mood swings are over. King - who handed over his 14 percent stake in the club last week as the US consortium concluded their £75million takeover - said: 'I remember speaking to Andrew and he was astounded by the extent to which we won a game, we lost a game, and there was doom and gloom at board level. 'As supporters you can do that, but as a board you can't be making decisions around transfer business because you lost on Wednesday night in Paisley. 'You need a proper football plan, a proper financial plan. I think sometimes when you've got too many supporters on the board, immediate results start to introduce knee-jerk thinking - 'Get him out, get him in, fire the manager'. 'You've got to be careful that you don't get caught up in that because it's dangerous. I think the new owners are going to come in with a plan and they'll stick to it. 'When things don't go well, it'll be fine. They won't throw the plan aside. I'm expecting that level of maturity because these are very mature investor business people who are looking at Rangers in a very mature way. "These are not some supporter that's coming in because the jacket, tie and brown brogues are important to them. 'They see Rangers as a great business opportunity and quite frankly, it is. 'But it was never going to be one as long as it remained a parochial cap-in-hand set-up. It can't be, 'Oh we need a couple of million quid so let's go around the directors and get a loan'. 'We had to break away from that. It's something I thought we had with 55, keeping Steven Gerrard on board and defending the title. 'I really thought we'd turned the corner, but unfortunately, it was decided to take Steven out of the picture. 'I regret that, but it is what it is. We are where we are. 'I'm definitely excited, genuinely excited about the progress the club will make now this transaction has gone through.' Cavenagh and Co have kicked-off the new era at Ibrox with a promise to inject an initial £20million into the club's transfer kitty. That will do for starters but more, a lot more, will be needed to make Rangers a serious contender for prizes. Taking on a Celtic side that have lifted 13 of the last 14 league crowns will not be easy but King is confident that new owners grasp the appetite for success which is now their job to feed. 'I do think that's an exact understanding,' he said. 'The ambition most certainly must be to win a trophy next season. 'My understanding is the expectation is to be competitive next season. 'I think the squad that we've got at the moment is way short of what we need to have a sustained run at the title while simultaneously participating in Europe. 'It's no surprise this year that the guys were up for it in Europe because that's just almost a mentality aspect of Europe. 'I don't know if some of them regarded that as being a shopping window - but the fact is they weren't quite up for going to Perth or Paisley or places like that. 'We need people that understand it the way Barry Ferguson did. 'Barry and guys like Allan McGregor understand what it takes to win league titles. 'It's not about the glamour games. It's about going away in a wet, windy, cold night to Aberdeen, to St Johnstone and grinding out an ugly 1-0 result. 'When I looked at the team, when we were down with 40 minutes to go, I wasn't seeing the leadership on the pitch. 'I wasn't seeing the characters on the pitch that were saying, come on, and grabbing them. 'If that was Richard Gough, he'd have been tackling the guys himself. 'I think we're way short on players. That's why I'm trying to moderate expectations to say as much as the 49ers are coming in to make an impact as quickly as they can and as sensibly as they can, I'm just concerned it might take a wee bit longer than we as supporters would like. 'But it doesn't mean we won't be going forward all the time.' A fresh pile of American's dollars will certainly help Rangers close the gap on Celtic. But just as valuable will be the business and sporting expertise being brought to the table by the Stateside consortium with their NFL experience. King added: 'They're not guys that are just going to throw money at the club. 'There's going to be a football plan and there's going to be a financial plan behind that. 'Andrew and the investors coming in understand there's going to have to be a substantial net investment. 'It's really how much is going in total because we have to get some guys out as well. 'We've been paying a lot of money for players, some that virtually never started and others that give us very little time on the pitch. 'If they can get them out and free up the wages and add the new money, then it could be a very, very substantial new investment.'


Daily Record
32 minutes ago
- Daily Record
How Rangers takeover impacts Celtic as Monday Jury predict Dermot Desmond reaction
Rangers are under new ownership - but should that worry Celtic? KEITH JACKSON: It's certainly something they'll be keeping an eye on. But the champions are in a strong position with bags of cash in the bank, an elite manager and a squad which has become a trophy winning machine. Dermot Desmond will plan on keeping it that way. ANDY NEWPORT: Worried? No. But they should be taking note. Rangers have been a shambles on and off the pitch for a generation. Now there is scope for major improvements but Celtic are a long way ahead. If the Hoops continue moving forward the job of catching them will only be harder for the new Ibrox regime. MICHAEL GANNON: It shouldn't worry Celtic. It should be welcomed. The lack of a proper challenge has led to things going a tad stale on the home front. This should sharpen the senses in the long term. CRAIG SWAN: Celtic have to worry about themselves and not what anyone else is doing. If they strengthen again, they are still the team to beat. Davide Ancelotti or Russell Martin, who will excite the Ibrox faithful most as boss? KEITH: Ancelotti is the clear fans' favourite even though the Italian hasn't got a single game under his managerial belt. There's a bit of stardust about his background and family name while Martin is still recovering from a disastrous season in the Premier League at Southampton. ANDY: Ancelotti likely but let's be honest, hiring the Italian is as much a risk as taking on guy who has just been punted from one of the Premier League's worst ever teams. The Ibrox faithful have every right to question why the new owners have not pursued more experienced operators with better track records. MICHAEL: Rangers fans will lean towards Ancelotti because of his background but Martin might be the better fit to cope with the demands of the domestic game, which is where Gers need to get their act together. CRAIG: Hard to speak on behalf of the Rangers fanbase. It's an individual thing. You'd guess Ancelotti due to his dad, but best ask the punters. Rangers are preparing for an overhaul this summer but do you expect much change to the Celtic squad? KEITH: Brendan Rodgers was already looking to raise the bar again this summer before the Americans came to town. A new striker, at least one winger, a midfielder and centre half will be on his wish list. The changes across the city might mean he's given more money to recruit them than he had originally anticipated. ANDY: They certainly need reinforcements, even if it's just to stave off a staleness creeping into Rodgers' group. A new centre-forward is the priority but they also need additions out wide, in midfield and in the centre of defence. A successor for Kasper Schmeichel wouldn't go amiss either. MICHAEL: It could be a big summer. Celtic need three or four in minimum but there's a feeling one or two big hitters might go and that will mean a bigger rebuilding job. CRAIG: Celtic will freshen up, no doubt. Brendan Rodgers has key areas to address and that work will have started long ago, regardless of what is happening at Ibrox. Kieran Tierney being a case in point. Ross County are standing by Don Cowie despite being relegated to the Championship - do you expect to see the Staggies bouncing back at the first attempt? KEITH: Good on them for sticking with Cowie. They'll have their work cut out trying to get straight back up next season but will probably have the biggest budget in the second tier. That should put them in pole position for promotion. ANDY: Roy MacGregor isn't shy to open the purse strings when cash is required and I expect to see the County chairman backing Cowie with the funds required to build a promotion-winning team. MICHAEL: County will be favourites to win promotion as Cowie will get backed in the transfer market. It's a tough league to escape though and the likes of Dunfermline, Ayr, Raith Rovers and Patrick Thistle will be pushing.


Daily Record
2 hours ago
- Daily Record
Former Scots footie star accused of deliberately getting booked in gambling scam
Ex-Livingston star Keaghan Jacobs, 35, faces court over claims he intentionally earned a yellow card in a 2019 match vs Celtic to aid a betting scam. A former SPFL star is due to appear in court accused of deliberately getting himself booked in an attempt to cheat at gambling. Keaghan Jacobs, 35, is alleged to have picked up a yellow card on purpose while playing for Livingston in a Scottish Premiership league match against Celtic. He is said to have 'acted in a manner whereby he would receive a yellow card for the purpose of enabling or assisting others to cheat at gambling ' during the clash at his team's Tony Macaroni stadium on October 6, 2019. A second man, Conan McDiarmid, 40, is alleged to have placed bets – and arranged for others to take punts – on Jacobs getting a caution. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. The case against Jacobs, from Edinburgh, and McDiarmid, from Bonnyrigg, Midlothian, called at Edinburgh Sheriff Court last week. Proceedings against Jacobs were continued without plea to later this month. McDiarmid's lawyer lodged a not guilty plea. A trial date was set for later this year. The match involved in the alleged betting scam saw Livingston secure a 2-0 win, handing the Hoops their first defeat of the season. Jacobs was shown the yellow card by referee Willie Collum for a foul on winger Jonny Hayes as the game was coming to a close in the 95th minute. Jacobs is a South African national who had two spells with Livingston between 2007 and 2015 and again between 2017 and 2022. The star has played a total of 252 times for the West Lothian club and scored 23 goals. He has also turned out for South African club Bidvest Wits, Falkirk, Arbroath and is currently playing with Lowland League club Gala Fairydean Rovers. He is believed to have made football history when he played alongside his three triplet brothers – Kyle, Devon and Sheldon – in a Scottish Third Division match between Livingston and Albion Rovers in April 2010. The 2-0 victory in front of just over 600 fans is said to be the only time four brothers have turned out for the same professional senior team in the same match. McDiarmid played as a defender with a number of amateur clubs, including Edinburgh United and Whitehill Welfare, before he retired in 2020 and moved into management.