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The Rangers were named the Russella Martina with the new club coach.
The 39-year-old saw competition like former Ibrox chief Steven Gerrard and son Carl Ancelotti Davide, who was an assistant to Bayern Munich, Napoli, Everton and Real Madrid.
Martin is a permanent heir to Philippe Clement, that was discharged in Februarywith the former captain Barry Ferguson has taken a team for the last months of last season.
He has signed a three-year contract in Rangers, who is under new ownership after the U.S. led by Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises.
Martin returns to the club where he spent five months on loan as a player in 2018. Earlier he was boss at MK DONS, Swansea and recently Southampton, where was released last December.
Helping former Scotland International in Ibrox will be Matt Gill, who worked under Martin in Swansea and Southampton.
The 44-year-old enjoyed a 17-year playing career that included more than 500 appearances for clubs, including Peterborough, Exeter and Bristol Rovers, as well as Norwich, where he and Martin were teammates between 2009 and 2011.
Rhys Owen also joined the Rangers as part of Martin’s Backro team, taking on the role of performance coach, and the couple previously worked together at Southampton.
Speaking after his appointment, Martin said: “The privilege is appointed by the main coach of the Rangers Football Club at the beginning of this exciting new chapter.
“I know what this club demands. From my time I have a taste of how special this club is, expectation, passion and history. Now, as I am returning, I am determined to restore success, for supporters, players and everything in this club.
“I’m here to set standards, work hard and do my best to gain respect for Rangers fans.
“There is a lot to be done, but the goal is clear: win the matches, win trophies and give fans to the Rangers a team to be proud of. We want to play with courage, take the ball, be aggressive and get up in big moments.
“Preparing for the preseason are already ongoing. I look forward to meeting the players and the construction of a team in which our fans can believe.”
Rangers Executive Director Patrick Stewart, who led the search with sports director Kevin Thelwell, said Martin was “candidate for prominent” and that “this meeting is about the construction of the winning team and a strong culture”.
Thelwell, meanwhile, said: “Russell comes to Rangers with a hard -earned experience. His time in the Premier League has tightened his approach, and tactically and personally. He is better for him, and we believe that this will turn into a type of leadership and performance that our fans expect.
“His teams play dominant football, control the ball, dictate the pace and physically impose. They are aggressively pressing and working relentlessly from the ball. These are all characteristics that we think are needed to be successful at home, distance and abroad.”
New Rangers Chairman Andrew Cavenagh added that it was a “thorough, rigorous procedure”, and Martin’s appointment “embodies the club -O’s goal to attract top -notch talent, strengthens them and support them.”
Cleaning toilet before school, a night shift in a supermarket, becoming a student of Buddhism and Vegan is not things you would expect to write about a ‘normal’ football manager. However, to understand Russel Martin coach, you need to know Russell Martin’s person.
It is not a secret complex relationship with your Scottish father. Said he was “too much violence” from his father to Mom Kerry and said Times In 2023, his “The whole world was spinning around that he proved him that he was wrong and made him proud.”
Practicing Buddhism helped him during his career “in terms of visualization, manifestation and setting goals” while “strict vegan for five or six years” to help combat ulcerative colitis inflammation, although he now goes “inside and out”.
And it was clear that Martin had coaching aspirations as a teenager, while he struggled to do so as a professional player.
“I started my badge at college at 17 because I thought it would be my path to the game,” he said Sky Sports earlier this year.
“I didn’t think I would have a career. I didn’t sign at the Pro club, I played Neliga and played for my college, and I went to a scholarship in America to study.
“I still dreamed of becoming a professional, but I just loved watching football, analyzing it and I had the right idea of what I wanted to do with the team. So, I thought it would be my path, and then luckily I got a break in Wycombe.”
While Martin admits that he took some of all the managers he played, he wanted to be his “own person” as “to convince someone to do something, you have to really believe it.”
“I spent most of my career writing things in the notebooks, doing my badges on the bus, and the guys hit me when I take out a laptop. I tried to take as much as I could from each individual.”
What came from this was a very possession of a game style, refusing to change his beliefs.
“Sometimes they criticized us that we were playing from the back (on MK Dons), but I had to show them all the good things they did and that the risk and reward were in our favor,” he said.
“The goalkeeper is a large part of it and creates a spare man. It’s always about finding a spare man early in the concept, then take the territory and play forward, but always for the purpose.”
Under Martin, they set a British record with a goal scored 56 times in March 2021.
The same was in Swansea, a lot of praise for the system, but while they achieved progress, he won less than 38 percent of his games in both clubs.
After his initial success in Southampton, Martin said his “biggest challenge” was convinced of the players that they could do it regularly in the Premier League. “
His philosophy ultimately cost him a job in Saints, but it’s the style that Rangers fans can expect to stick to as “a coach’s job is to find a problem and find a solution or determine what will be the next problem.”
Click here to read more about Martin’s football trip, the style that his teams play and more.
Former Rangers striker Steven Naismith, who has played more than 50 times with Martin in Norwich and Scotland, believes the meeting is the right choice.
He said Sky Sports News: “Developing players, recruiting and football attacks (all questions) that are long marked in the team. I think all the forces that Russell brings are.
“I think in every name it is mentioned and related to work, I think it probably marks the most framework for what is needed at the club at the moment.
“The most common thing I would have imagined everyone heard was the aspect of the leadership. It was very clear from the first time I played with him.
“I know he talked about his people and such things. He knows how to use the players, staff and those behind the scenes in Norwich. He was a great part of what their success was as a club.
“His knowledge and his intelligence about the game are really good. I think even when we were in our mid -twenties, he had a hunger to learn about the game.
“He had a brave style he believed in. As players, you sit and think, how realistically it is? He showed him from MK Dons at Swansea in Southampton. He was clear with him.
“He made performances and results that quickly came to the Premier League as a manager, which is very impressive.
“He is a great communicator. I think it was the clearest in every club very quickly. That style, you can recognize him, you can see him. He is intelligent. He is someone who learns the mistakes. He did it as a player.
“You listen to any player who has worked under him, it is all very positive about that communication. She requires, but she comes across the right moment, in the right way, whether he puts her hand on the player or be a little more aggressive with what he wants.
“I think communication skills are massively important because I think the fans of Rangers and Scottish fans are generally, they are not a horses. The conversation on a topic does not wash, they want to go straight to the point.
“I think a few fans in Rangers will remember him as a player and that’s probably not the best picture of him. As a coach, he is the opposite of what he was a player. He was a defender, someone who apparently tried to get into a game that came to the end of his career.
“But as a coach, he is a coach forward. He is an offensive coach. It is, for me, the greatest benefit and probably the biggest thing that gives you hope to enter the club where you play against the low block for most of the time.
“The player helped him here. He was at the club in a really difficult moment and he would know what comes if things don’t work.
“Russell is a strong, powerful character. I don’t think he’s never hiding. He never gives up on challenges.”
Martin and his Rangers Detachment will return to preseason training on June 23 before the new campaign.
His first taste of Ibrox excavation comes to July 6, when they hosted the Bruggge club, which finished second in the Belgian Pro League, in his first pre -season friendly.
The detachment then went to the training camp from July 7 at St George’s Park.
Rangers then faced the first qualifiers for the Champions League, with the first foot on July 23, and returnees 29/30.
Middlesbrough – who finished 10th in the BET championship – then visit Ibrox 26 July 26.
The Prime Minister’s Prime Minister’s campaign moves on 2/3. to live on Sky Sports News.