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Rangers go to town on the SFA with seven-pronged statement of fury condemning John Brown's 'corruption' charge

Rangers go to town on the SFA with seven-pronged statement of fury condemning John Brown's 'corruption' charge

Daily Record8 hours ago

The Ibrox side are furious with the governing body over Brown's sanction over his claim on the club's TV channel
Rangers have defended Ibrox legend John Brown after being hit by an SFA charge for his live TV comments during their game against Hibs.
The club have been served a notice of complaint from the Hampden hierarchy after the former defender said it was 'corrupt' when Rangers ' ghost goal at Easter Road wasn't awarded.

's effort in the 2-2 last day of the Premiership season draw clearly looked over the line but referee Nick Walsh waved play on.

Hibs went up the pitch and scored, prompting Rangers TV co-commentator Brown to question the integrity of the decision.
When offered the chance to clarify the comments, Brown stood by them - and now Rangers have backed their Hall of Fame player.
The SFA's compliance officer has issued a notice of complaint but the club is adamant that no rules have been broken.
In their strongly-worded response, Gers have highlighted other, similar incidents that haven't resulted in any form of punishment.
The SFA's KMI panel agreed that Raskin's goal should have stood in Edinburgh, despite referee chief Willie Collum backing Walsh's call not to award it.
Rangers have challenged the SFA's consistency and urged them to sort out Scottish football's real problems - rather than attempt to carpet Brown.

A club spokesperson said: 'Rangers FC has submitted a full response to the Scottish FA's Notice of Complaint concerning a remark made during commentary of the Hibernian v Rangers match at the end of last season. The club firmly denies any breach of Scottish FA rules.
'We are surprised that a complaint has been raised at all, given the context of the comment and the Scottish FA's prior treatment of similar incidents.
'Our response highlights that the Scottish FA's own KMI Panel judged that the referee's decision on the day was incorrect, with four out of five panel members agreeing that a goal should have been awarded to Rangers.

'That finding helps explain the nature of a spontaneous emotional comment, delivered during a highly charged moment and immediately challenged live on air.
'Our response also sets out serious concerns about the Scottish FA's selective enforcement and inconsistency.
'We have highlighted multiple examples of similar or stronger remarks made elsewhere in Scottish football that have led to no charges or sanctions.
"While we remain committed to maintaining high standards, we will continue to challenge any action we consider to be unfair or disproportionate.
'For many supporters, this charge only adds to the wider frustration surrounding regulatory oversight in recent months when there are more serious issues in the game to tackle, including improving officiating standards for the benefit of Scottish football.'

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