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    Rangers: Next Steps For Crisis-Hit Club

    Rangers' historic step into administration almost certainly rules the club out of European competition next season and will concentrate minds simply on taking the club's future game by game.

    The experience of Portsmouth , the only English Premier League side to end up in similar circumstances, suggests administration can devour between three and four months.

    Since Rangers would have to emerge from their present predicament by the end of March to have a hope of a renewed European football licence, the prospect seems very unlikely.

    Paul Clark, the administrator, has said the target is to bring stability to Ibrox.

    The first step will be to ensure the very short term. 

    Saturday's match at home to Kilmarnock will go ahead as planned, say the administrators, despite reservations expressed by Strathclyde Police.

    Negotiations between HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), the club and creditors will begin in earnest on Wednesday.

    They will attempt to reach a compromise, culminating in a creditors' meeting at some stage in the future to decide if they will accept what is offered.

    What might be described as the big tax case against Rangers, for £49m, has yet to unravel as a result of a tribunal in January.

    It revolves around the use of Employee Benefit Trusts to pay players between 2001 and 2010 and is a still large black cloud on the horizon.

    At present, HMRC are concentrating on the non-payment of £9m PAYE and VAT following the takeover of Rangers by Craig Whyte in May last year.

    Mr Whyte puts the total figure, including all tax along with penalties, at around £75m.

    It is a huge sum and the administrators will have to get to grips with it quickly.

    All of Rangers' assets, including the club's home stadium Ibrox, land attached to it and its training base, Murray Park, will be examined, with a view to satisfying creditors.

    But any potential sale of Ibrox is stymied by the listed building status of the main stand.

    Planning regulations make the sale of the Murray Park for housing very unlikely, if not impossible.

    Players' contracts will be honoured in as far as they can be; some may be asked to take pay drops. 

    There may well be painful job- and cost-cutting among club staff.

    Fans' support for the efforts of the administrators is key, but it will be difficult since the 10-point deduction has effectively ended the Scottish Premier League (SPL) title race and reduced interest.

    Millions of pounds of revenue from participation in Europe next season cannot now be counted upon.

    The taxman forced Rangers to appoint administrators during a dramatic day, but HMRC are given no preferential treatment in recovering their money. 

    "We are in line with anyone else, cleaners, caterers, we are in with those guys," said a spokesman.

     

    47 comments

    • Andrew  •  York, England  •  3 months ago
      I suspect the football industry needs a few really big clubs (like Rangers) to go belly up before it finally wakes up to the fact it cannot continue operating to a different set of rules and standards from the rest of society. £75m owed to the taxman? It's a disgrace.
      • Kieron 3 months ago
        Correct! although rangers arent that big actualy, they just like to think so
    • jake  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      Hopefully this is the beginning of a massive reality check for football.The idea that any business can pay more in wages than they receive in income,and just continually borrow and defer paying their tax bill is fantastical.
      • Oxyz N 3 months ago
        As I said before, there will only be a crisis when clubs start loosing they're supporters/fan's money and sponsors so they won't be able to keep up the astronomical salaries they pay themselves on administration and the players.
      • jake 3 months ago
        Absolutely right oxyz N.
      • michael m 3 months ago
        Stupid mugs moan about ticket prices........still go though.
        Stop going, stop supporting the sky corporation then ticket prices will drop.
    • Scotty  •  3 months ago
      Take away sky and the Foreign owners and EPL is just a normal league
    • tracy  •  3 months ago
      seeing as theyve no chance of winning the league(personaly i think theyd blown their chances anyway) its surely time to unload quite a few overpaid undertalented players and save a few bob.
      • Kieron 3 months ago
        Are you Craig Whyte?
    • Neil  •  Edinburgh, Scotland  •  3 months ago
      after seeing some of the stupid letters here I have to say is it only now people see how
      over paid the so-called football " stars " are paid
    • Alan M  •  3 months ago
      Something absolutely stinks here:

      Paying players from Employee Benefits Trust from 2001 to 2010 - that was David Murray. Setting up a false pension fund then using it to pay employees, well that is illegal, if it were not we would all do it. It was done to avoid paying tax, there is no other reason and that is where the tax problem comes from.

      So much for David Murray having been the saviour of the club; he is the one who killed it.

      Oh, and don't listen to the rubbish about HMRC not being a preferred creditor. The law of the land says they are THE preferred creditor in all circumstances, there is nothing that can change that.
      • Kieron 3 months ago
        spot on!
      • Phil Kinellman 3 months ago
        Spot on Allan, I think Murray knew all along that what he was doing was illegal and the truth would have to come out in the end, and once it did and the shyt hit the fan, he wouldn't have a leg to stand on, and that's why he sold out to White for a pound.
    • S  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      I pay Tax Rangers should pay Tax
    • ANDREW  •  Reading, England  •  3 months ago
      As a Celtic supporter I feel sympathy for the genuine Rangers fans who have been sold short by a series of dodgy directors. The SPL cannot afford for any of the top teams to go down like this. Bring back a proper league structure with 2 home/away games and not the meaningless "lets see how many times we can play each other in a season" that we have now!
    • Ian  •  Maidenhead, England  •  3 months ago
      Rangers have had dodgy directors etc for sometime. This is true throughout all of the british football clubs at all levels. you only have to look at the likes of Portsmouth and others. The FA are are not doing enough to sort this shame out. It would appear anyone can approach a club with a large bag full of cash and ask if it is for sell without any in-depth questions being asked etc. come on FA there are far too many un-diresables involve in our great game. Perhaps all of the clubs should be owned entirely by their fans.
    • Mark  •  Edinburgh, Scotland  •  3 months ago
      Money has taken over `The Beautiful game`. It`s big business now at the top. Man utd leading the way with their greed and arrogance.. There is nothing sincere anymore in the sport. Shareholders watching profits not the ball.
    • janty42  •  Slough, England  •  3 months ago
      tax the overpaid oafs who play in top teams, none of them are worth a jot!
    • bogfairy  •  3 months ago
      OMG! When I was told Rangers had a receiver in I thought they mean't a new goalie.....shame to see it all going t!ts up.
    • KILLA  •  3 months ago
      A big club like Rangers in administration??? Someone has got the money and it sure is not the fans who have supported them with their money for years.
    • Mo  •  Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland  •  3 months ago
      As a fan I have knew this was coming but still does not make the pain any harder to take. I also find it strange that only the club are being chased by the tax man and not the people that got the club into this situation as well, if anything both should be getting hounded.

      The really sad thing is that it look like a Pre-Pack is on the cards which means we will lose all our history and start afresh as a new club and personally I dont think I could take that and follow a NEW Rangers. I hope ths is not the case or a life long love of this club will be over in the hardest way possible. Have had some great times and some bad times but nothing like this and I hope that this wake up call is heeded and no other club has to go down this way in the future.

      To Celtic we welcomed the chase and that race could well now be over so good luck to you.

      Also think this is what Whyte had planned from the start as in Pre-Pack as he may take us back into football as a New Rangers but with England in mind and start at the bottom and work towards the EPL. This would not surprise me at all.
    • william d  •  3 months ago
      Rangers could sell their assets.....Union jacks, bowler hats, pictures of England's queen and assorted masonic regalia.
    • Robert  •  3 months ago
      Why are they allowed to operate in this way? what makes them so different they seem to get away with everything. Just let them go.
    • Betty  •  Manchester, England  •  3 months ago
      watch the players leave like rats on a sinking ship.the local lads might not but the foreign legion will. its all the stupid wages these clubs pay for players. it will kill the game in the end. pure greed.
    • ROY  •  Edinburgh, Scotland  •  3 months ago
      For those who speak of the overpaid players. Outside the Old Firm and possibly Hearts, most players in the SPL earn 1k to 4k per week. Wayne Rooney probably earns more in a week thn these guys earn in their career.
    • david  •  Glasgow, Scotland  •  3 months ago
      They have been found out. Rangers FC, have been cheating for years off and on the park. no mason handshake is gonna get yous out of this one
    • Sandpot  •  London, England  •  3 months ago
      How can they be 75 million in debt. I mean don't they do the adding up. I cannot understand it. Yes, get rid of the whole place. What a waste of money.