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Author Topic: We'll Wait For Marv  (Read 1853 times)

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Offline Tallman

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We'll Wait For Marv
« on: March 18, 2005, 06:06:08 AM »
By Emma Dodds (Glasgow Rangers FC)

ALEX McLEISH has revealed that Marvin Andrews will be given until the last minute to prove his fitness for this Sunday's CIS Cup final against Motherwell.

The towering Trinidad & Tobago international sustained a knee injury against Dundee last weekend and has been working around the clock with the medical team this week in an attempt to clear up the problem.

Big Marv has been an ever present in the last 29 starting line-ups and is praying he will recover sufficiently enough to take to the field at Hampden.

Should the Light Blues win on Sunday, and it is by no means a foregone conclusion, Andrews would make history by becoming the first player to lift the League Cup in successive seasons with different clubs and that is obviously something the manager does not want to deprive him of.

McLeish said: "We're waiting on Marvin. He has been assessed every day this week and we'll take a final look at him tomorrow.

"Of course we want to give him every opportunity to play because he's been tremendous for us this season."

Big Eck also confirmed that midfielder Barry Ferguson is carrying a knock but insists that he is certain to play in the Hampden showpiece.

He added: "Barry has been carrying hamstring and groin niggles for a while.

"If you remember before he signed he missed about four weeks of action at Blackburn with a groin strain, so he is chasing 100 per cent sharpness.

"But his presence on the pitch is so important to Rangers and we know he'll be ready and right up for this one."
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Offline Tallman

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McLeish waits on late fitness test on Andrews
« Reply #1 on: March 18, 2005, 10:37:07 AM »
By Phil Gordon (Times Online)

MARVIN ANDREWS has surprised a lot of people this season, including Alex McLeish. However, the man who has become Rangers’ unlikely cult hero may have to defy the odds if he wants to avoid missing out on the CIS Insurance Cup final against Motherwell on Sunday.

The Trinidad and Tobago defender is struggling to be fit for the showpiece occasion at Hampden Park because of a knee injury that he picked up at Dundee last Sunday in scoring the late goal that secured a Bank of Scotland Premierleague victory.

Andrews has not trained this week and McLeish will give a final decision today on the former Livingston player who is seeking to become the first person to win the Scottish League Cup in successive seasons with different clubs. “We are waiting to see how Marvin is,” the manager said yesterday. “He has been assessed every day and we will take a final look at him after Friday’s training. I want to give him every opportunity to play because he has been fantastic for us this season.”

McLeish admitted yesterday that even he had not expected Andrews to make his imprint so forcefully on the Ibrox scene this season. Public opinion believed that the towering centre-back, who was signed from Livingston as a free agent last summer, was going to be fortunate to get a regular game. However, since then, Rangers have sold Craig Moore to Borussia Moenchengladbach and Jean-Alain Boumsong to Newcastle United, and Andrews has responded to the responsibility by forming an impressive partnership with Sotirios Kyrgiakos, who was signed from Panathinaikos during the January transfer window.

“Marvin is one of the players who have exceeded my expectations, as has Nacho Novo,” McLeish reflected. “Both were stepping up to a big club from relatively smaller ones in the Premierleague. There is a lot of expectation at a club like Rangers for players to handle.

“I always felt that Marvin was going to be a very useful addition here. If I am honest, I think if we had not signed him, then every other side in the Premierleague would have gladly taken him as a free agent. That tells you his contribution.”

McLeish revealed that the robust Andrews, a born-again Christian who attends prayer meetings every Sunday night in Kirkcaldy — where he was first introduced to Scottish football with Raith Rovers — is not the subject of ridicule about his religious faith among the normally fearsome cynics who make up the body of the kirk in football dressing-rooms.

“The boys respect him,” McLeish said. “He takes jokes in good spirit but the players love him as a person and I don’t think Marvin is the kind of guy who people would take liberties with over his beliefs.”

McLeish feels that his side’s progress since his frenetic transfer activity last summer and in the January window — which saw 12 arrivals at Ibrox, in total — has been ahead of schedule. Aside from this cup final, there is the little matter of a title duel with Celtic to consume attention once Sunday is out of the way.

“It has surprised me,” McLeish said. “We have rebuilt this side and a lot of players have come in this season. We are vying for the title with Celtic and we’re in a cup final this weekend. However, I still feel there is more to come from this squad. I have still to tweak one or two positions but I think we can get even better.

“There are players in our squad who do not yet have the experience of winning trophies and finals. It is new to them but once you experience that, it gives you a stronger mentality. It is a young team but it is to their credit that they were able to gel so quickly.”

It is ironic that this final should bring McLeish up against the club who gave him his start in management. He went to Motherwell in 1994, after spending his entire playing career at Aberdeen and spent four years at Fir Park before moving on to Hibernian and then Ibrox.

His admiration for the job that Terry Butcher has performed in taking Motherwell to their first final since 1991, with no money to speak of, is genuine. “The job Terry has done at Motherwell has caught the eye of people in England and he now has a well-deserved reputation as a manager,” McLeish said, referring to Butcher’s early unsuccessful forays into the role at Coventry City and Sunderland over a decade ago.

“For him to bounce back from those setbacks says it all. A lesser man would have given up. Terry and I used to have great encounters, both when he played for Rangers and I was at Aberdeen, and also during Scotland-England matches. He was a fearsome competitor, though I once accidentally broke his leg in a game at Ibrox which I don’t know if he’s forgiven me for.

“When his Motherwell side played us in the Scottish Cup semi-final two years ago at Hampden, Rangers won 4-3 but we were 2-1 down and I will warn my players that we will have to guard against that sort of performance this weekend.”
The Conquering Lion of Judah shall break every chain.

Offline mcaw

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Re: We'll Wait For Marv
« Reply #2 on: March 20, 2005, 01:32:07 PM »
marvin did miss the final to day i feel kinda bad for him but i sure i coulda play with one foot and rangers woulda still win
 
Rangers crushed Motherwell 5-1 at Hampden Park to lift the first silverware of the season - the CIS Insurance Cup.
Giant Greek defender Sotirios Kyrgiakos had the most eventful afternoon by heading two of the goals in a game that also featured a rare opener from Maurice Ross and goals from more regular net-finders Fernando Ricksen and Nacho Novo.


Well had looked losers from the off after falling two goals behind within 10 minutes but although David Partridge headed them back into the game three minutes later it was not to be a lifeline.

There was simply no hiding place for Well's less-experienced players on the expansive Hampden pitch but at least they had fared better than Dundee United, who had been thrashed 7-1 there in the semi-final.

The first strike, in the fourth minute, came from a most unexpected source however as Ross, who was only in the side because Alan Hutton had broken his leg the previous month, rarely finds the net.

He did so with aplomb however, first by timing a run into the box to meet Thomas Buffel's pass and then by lofting the ball over the advancing Gordon Marshall.

With his 41st birthday fast approaching, Marshall became the oldest man ever to play in a League Cup final but his luck was again missing in the ninth minute when team-mate Phil O'Donnell managed to head Barry Ferguson's free-kick over him when he had looked set to catch.

And that was just perfect for Kyrgiakos who headed into an unguarded net.

The Greek was doubly at fault three minutes later however as Well provided an instant response. First he pulled Kevin McBride back by the shirt and then failed to prevent Partridge from heading Steven Hammell's free-kick past Rangers goalkeeper Ronald Waterreus.

The next goal was always going to be significant and Ricksen was the man who provided it in the 33rd minute when his free-kick from some 30 yards out beat Marshall at his near post, with Stephen Craigan having been booked for fouling Buffel in the first place.

Well had a lucky escape before the break when Kyrgiakos was once again located at the back post, this time by Gregory Vignal's free-kick, and Marshall was again helpless as the ball flashed across his box. There was nothing between Novo and an empty net but fortunately for Well the ball eluded his outstretched leg.

Neither side decided to make changes after the break but Well boss Terry Butcher might have wished he had as Novo made it 4-1 within three minutes.

Vignal poked the ball forward for him to chase and Partridge will have realised straight away he was never going to catch the Spaniard, who lofted the ball over Marshall with ease.

Not long after, the veteran showed his age when he allowed Ricksen to poke the ball on to the crossbar as he dithered gathering a cut-back from Dado Prso, but Well were able to draw breath as Ross' initial delivery had gone out of play.

O'Donnell was booked for a foul on Vignal before Well made a double change in the 65th minute, with Richie Foran and Jim Paterson replaced by teenage duo David Clarkson and Marc Fitzpatrick.

Novo had a goal ruled out for offside after he had rounded Marshall, with the decision to flag him on receipt of Prso's pass firmly in the marginal category.

Referee Mike McCurry had enjoyed a fairly straightforward afternoon but was required to pass judgement on an incident in the Rangers box that saw Craigan go down clutching his face as Kyrgiakos raised a hand.

He decided to take no action and O'Donnell headed over from the free-kick that had already been awarded.

Ross blasted over a good chance to notch another improbable strike before Fitzpatrick was booked in the 75th minute for felling Ricksen.

With the game won Rangers sent on Alex Rae for Vignal with 11 minutes remaining and two minutes later Ferguson and Martyn Corrigan were both shown yellow cards following a flare-up.

Rangers sent on Steven Thompson for Novo before Kyrgiakos made it 5-1 with four minutes remaining, charging in unchallenged to head a Ricksen corner in off a post.

The game had also doubled as a tribute to Davie Cooper, the winger who had played for both clubs before suffering a fatal brain haemorrhage 10 years ago at the age of 39.

And it was the club where he had spent the majority of his career who were able to rack up a 24th success in this competition, with Well unable to add to the single victory they had enjoyed back in the 1950-51 season

 

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