Rangers Academy
Full nameRangers Football Club Academy
Nickname(s)Rangers Colts
GroundRangers Training Centre,[1] Milngavie
WebsiteClub website

In addition to their senior squad, Rangers Football Club also operate a football Academy which contains a number of football teams culminating in a B team, which plays friendly challenge matches against various domestic and European sides in accordance with the academy's development plan, having declined the option to continue in the SPFL Reserve League despite winning the competition in 2019. Historically, the club's second side was known as the Rangers Swifts.

In the 2006–07 season, the under-20s won their league and the Scottish Youth Cup, ending rivals Celtic's run of six consecutive league titles and defeating them 5–0 in the final of the Youth Cup at Hampden Park. In 2019, the Rangers under-18 team qualified for the UEFA Youth League for the first time. Underage teams also take part in the Scottish Challenge Cup and the Glasgow Cup.

History

Beginnings of reserve football

Rangers' first known involvement in reserve league football was in 1895 when their club secretary William Wilton initiated the setting up of the Scottish Reserve League.[2][3] The competition comprised the reserve sides of five clubs; Rangers, Celtic, Hearts, Leith Athletic and the Queens Park Strollers. In July 1896 the league was expanded to 10 sides, and renamed the Scottish Combination league.[3] In 1909, a new Scottish Reserve League was set up, often including at least one non-reserve side of a non-league club in each of its seasons.[2] The league was disbanded during World War I, but effectively re-established in 1919 as the Scottish Alliance League. As with previous incarnations, this reserve league also contained the first XI of several non-league sides.[2] An AGM in 1938, resulted in the non-league sides being removed and the league became exclusive to First Division reserve sides. The advent of World War II, however, once again saw the suspension of national reserve league football in Scotland, although regional leagues were set up.[2][4]

Inter war years

Upon the outbreak of the Second World War, all competitive football in Scotland was suspended. During this time there was special wartime football in the form of regional league competitions with Rangers playing in the Southern League. The regionalisation also saw Scottish reserve football postponed as the war effort put a major strain on the resources and playing staff of clubs with many of them serving in the Armed forces and some seeing active service abroad. The reserve side were crowned champions of their league in 1939 before seeing the following season abandoned.

1975 league reconstruction

With the end of hostilities in 1946, Rangers returned to play competitive football again with the reserve side featuring in the Scottish Reserve League. This was to continue unchanged for almost three decades until the first of many reconstructions were made to football in Scotland.

SPL breakaway

The formation of the Scottish Premier League in 1998, resulted in a significant change in youth team football in Scotland. The SPL began a league for members clubs youth players aged under-18. This was alongside the Reserve league, which had been revamped into a league primarily for under-21 players. Rangers would go on to win the under-18 league three times, first in 2001–02 then in 2006–07 and most recently in 2007–08.

Reconstructing the youth department

The opening of Rangers Training Centre (known as Murray Park) in 2001 was the one of the first stages in the club's move to develop a football academy. Although the nomenclature was not present at that time, Rangers did begin to focus upon youth development and under the then first-team manager Dick Advocaat the club appointed its first Head of Youth Development, Jan Derks, in March 2000. Derks new role was strategic and operational and saw him lay the foundations for the club's academy as well as helping the transition of the youth set-up to the new training centre. Prior to this, the club had employed a youth development officer, with their focus being solely scouting and coaching.[5] Derks remained in position for three years despite former player Tommy McLean being recruited as his presumptive successor in May 2001[6] and Rangers eventually appointed former Aberdeen scout George Adams to succeed Derks in February 2003.[7]

As the scope of the youth department grew, so did its costs, so on 20 April 2004, Rangers announced the creation of a new company which would oversee the development of the club's youth players.[8] The company, named Rangers Youth Development Limited, was entirely self-funding but completely owned by the club. It attracted four investors from outside Rangers who have invested £1 million, with the club also putting up an initial £2.5 million.[8] It led to Rangers F.C. being in the unfamiliar position of buying its own youth players from Rangers Youth Development Ltd.[8][9] The Youth Development company owned the young players and the club had to bid for them, although it had first option on all the players. If both sides cannot reach an agreement on a transfer fee then a FIFA transfer model will be used.[8] Any profit made by the company will be divided between investors with the majority being invested to fund more youth players.[10] The main reason for the formation of the company was to offset the running costs of the club's training centre.[8] However, many of the Rangers fans were opposed to the formation of the new company.[11] The activities of Rangers Youth Development Ltd were largely unnoticed and the company was dissolved after submitting its final set of accounts in June 2010.

The elite development era

In September 2005, as part of a restructuring of the club management, Adams left his role as director of youth football.[12] The moves also saw future Academy heads take over responsibility for youth administration.[12] In May 2017, the club announced its intention to withdraw from the SPFL Development League and play a programme of matches against a mixture of English and European Academies, as well as sides from League One and League Two in Scotland.[13]

In July 2018, it was reported that reserve leagues would be reintroduced in lieu of the development leagues that had been in place since 2009. The top tier of the new SPFL Reserve League featured 18 clubs, whilst a second-tier reserve League comprised nine clubs. Other than a minimum age of 16, no age restrictions applied to the leagues.[14] At the end of its first season (201819) which Rangers entered and won, the club along with several others intimated that they would withdraw from the Reserve League to play a variety of challenge matches, in a similar manner as two years earlier.[15] They later entered a small league (under-21 plus three overage) along with three other Scottish clubs and Brentford and Huddersfield Town from the English leagues.[16]

In May 2021, it was reported that Rangers (and Celtic) were in 'productive' talks with the Lowland Football League (the fifth tier of the senior setup) to have colt teams playing in their division for the following season,[17] with an earlier proposal to include them in an expanded Scottish League Two (fourth tier)[18] still under consideration by the SPFL for the year after that.[19]

Academy structure

The Academy is responsible for providing players for the Rangers first-team and is divided into four areas. Between under-11 and under-12 level, the teams play in a seven-a-side football competition, although the latter side transitions to 11-a-side after Christmas.[20] Thereafter, the under-12s and under-13s play on a modified pitch which is slightly smaller with reduced sized goals than regulation play[20] but from under-14 level onward all Academy teams play on normal pitches. All players from under-8 to under-15 are schoolboys, however, from Senior level many sign contracts to become professional youth players.[20] The U11 to U17 age groups play in the SFA Club Academy Scotland programme at ‘Elite’ level.

In 2017, the Rangers academy was one of eight across the country designated 'elite' status on the introduction of Project Brave, an SFA initiative to concentrate the development of the best young players at a smaller number of clubs with high quality facilities and coaching than was previously the case.[21][22]

Academy partnerships

Rangers operate a North American Academy, which began in 2014,[23] and have thirteen partner clubs across the United States and Canada.[24]

The academy has a partnership with Coerver Coaching who deliver Coerver method skills coaching to the Children's section on a weekly basis.[25] On 18 December 2015, Rangers announced a coaching and development partnership with Scottish Lowland League club Gala Fairydean Rovers which effectively saw the Galashiels side act as a feeder to Rangers.[26] In June 2016, Rangers announced a partnership with East Dunbartonshire council which saw 24 of the club's youth players aged 11 to 15 attend Boclair Academy (located a short distance from the Auchenhowie complex) allowing them to combine their academic and football studies.[27]

Competition record

Rangers were members of the Scottish Premier Reserve League from its foundation in the 1998–99 season until 2012. As the Scottish Premier League was considering disbanding its Scottish Premier Reserve League for the 2009–10 season,[28] Rangers announced it was withdrawing its reserve team in order to play friendly games instead.[29] After Rangers demotion to the Scottish Third Division in 2012,[30] the club entered a reserve team into the Scottish Football League Reserve League[31] and the side went on to win the competition.[32] The league ended after the formation of the SPFL, with a development league for under-20's teams taking its place and the club's reserve side was disbanded.

A youth league was founded for under-18s in 1998 as an alternative to the Scottish Premier Reserve League which originally was for under-21s. The former competition was widened to include under-19s in 2003. Rangers were removed from the under-19 league after the club's demotion to the Scottish Third Division[30] in 2012, with youth players featuring in the 2012-13 SFL Reserve league instead. The formation of the Scottish Professional Football League in the 2013–14 season, saw the formation of an under-20s league with the number of teams increased to 16[33] and teams were allowed to field two over-age outfield players and an overage goalkeeper.[34] The league was renamed the SPFL Development League in 2014, with the number of teams increased to 17.[35]

Rangers youth sides play in a number of cup competitions including the Glasgow Cup and Scottish Youth Cup. From 2015 onwards it is also possible for the Academy to participate in the UEFA Youth League by the Under-18 side winning the previous season's league at that age level, or by the senior team reaching the UEFA Champions League group stages; this was achieved in 2019 via the first route.[36] In the 2019–20 UEFA Youth League, Rangers defeated BSC Young Boys of Switzerland in the opening round on away goals after a 5–5 result on aggregate,[37] and eliminated Slovakians Slovan Bratislava 4–1 in the next.[38]

In June 2016, it was announced by the SPFL that the Challenge Cup would be expanded to include teams from the Welsh Premier League, Northern Irish Premiership and an Under-20s side from each Scottish Premiership club.[39] In the 2016–17 edition, Rangers U20 won their opening tie against Stirling University F.C. of the Lowland League[lower-alpha 1] but lost in the next round to Stenhousemuir of the third level. In the 2019–20 edition, they travelled to Northern Ireland and defeated Ballymena United who had been NIFL runners-up in the previous season,[40] then knocked out Solihull Moors of the English National League, again away from home, this time on penalties.[41] In the quarter-finals, they beat Wrexham from the same league at Ibrox,[42] with many of the same players also involved in a 5–0 win over Celtic in the Scottish Youth Cup a few days earlier[43] and in the Youth League victory over Slovan ten days later. They were drawn away to Inverness CT in the semi-finals, meaning the Wrexham match would be their only home fixture in the competition, with two ties in England, one in Northern Ireland and one in the Scottish Highlands 170 kilometres (110 mi) from Glasgow. They lost 2–1 to Inverness, but also set a new record by going further than any reserve side had previously gone in the competition.[44] A few days earlier, Rangers' run in the UEFA Youth League also came to an end with a 4–0 defeat to Atlético Madrid.[45]

  1. Home ties in the Scottish Challenge Cup have been played at Forthbank Stadium in Stirling and Firhill Stadium in Glasgow.

League participation

Players

  • In addition to below, Rangers F.C. Academy also operates youth sides from under-11 upwards.
  • Please note that squad numbers listed relate only to first team numbers. In youth matches the team wear 1-11 and 12-21 (21 worn in place of 13) on the bench.
  • Some academy players on a domestic loan can still feature for the youth sides, but cannot play for the first team.

B Team Squad

As of 10 January 2024[46]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
41 GK Scotland SCO Lewis Budinauckas
46 DF England ENG Johnly Yfeko
47 DF Scotland SCO Robbie Fraser
48 MF Scotland SCO Arron Lyall
49 GK Scotland SCO Jay Hogarth
50 MF Scotland SCO Darren McInally
52 FW Nigeria NGA Thompson Ishaka
53 DF Scotland SCO Jack Harkness
54 MF Scotland SCO Mackenzie Strachan
55 DF Scotland SCO Connor Allan
56 MF United States USA Tyler Pasnik
57 FW England ENG Archie Stevens
58 DF Scotland SCO Greig Allen
59 DF Scotland SCO Kristian Webster
60 DF Scotland SCO Leyton Grant
61 MF England ENG Paul Nsio
63 MF Scotland SCO Kerr Robertson
64 MF Scotland SCO Bailey Rice
65 FW England ENG Zak Lovelace
66 MF Scotland SCO Findlay Curtis
68 DF Scotland SCO Zander Hutton
69 GK Scotland SCO Jacob Pazikas
70 GK Northern Ireland NIR Mason Munn
74 GK Scotland SCO Greig Thackray
No. Pos. Nation Player
75 DF Scotland SCO Arran Kerr
77 DF Scotland SCO Connor Campbell
78 DF Scotland SCO Cameron Scott
80 MF Scotland SCO Grant Leitch
81 MF Scotland SCO Calum Adamson
85 FW Scotland SCO Lewis Stewart
86 FW Scotland SCO Chris Eadie
90 FW Scotland SCO Kieron Willox
92 FW Scotland SCO James Graham
93 MF Scotland SCO Cole McKinnon
GK Scotland SCO Alfie Halliwell
DF Scotland SCO Duncan Barlow
DF Scotland SCO Jack Caldwell
DF Scotland SCO Lyle Wark
DF Scotland SCO Jack Wylie
MF Scotland SCO Cameron Bell
MF Northern Ireland NIR Callum Burnside
MF Scotland SCO Aiden McCallion
MF Northern Ireland NIR Blaine McClure
MF Scotland SCO Alexander Smith
MF Scotland SCO Harry Weir
FW Wales WAL Josh Gentles
FW Scotland SCO Oliver Goodbrand

Manager history

Rangers reserve side, in its various guises, has had several managers and coaches during its operation. For many years the long standing name of the second string was the Reserve team, however, due to internal restructuring it was more recently known as the Under-20 team, then the Development squad and currently B team. As consequently the title of the manager overseeing the team changed to reflect this. Below is a list of individuals who oversaw the reserve side since approximately 1983.

Name From To Tenure Title
Scotland John Hagart November 1983 7 April 1986 2 years, 5 months Reserves manager
Scotland Don Mackay 16 April 1986 3 February 1987[47] 293 days Reserves manager
Scotland Peter McCloy 3 February 1987 1 March 1987 26 days Reserves coach
Northern Ireland Jimmy Nicholl 1 March 1987 30 June 1989 2 years, 121 days Reserves coach
Scotland Davie Dodds and
Scotland John McGregor
June 1989 October 1991 2 years, 4 months Joint Reserves coaches
Scotland John McGregor October 1991 1 March 2003[48] 12 years Reserves coach
Scotland John Brown 1 March 2003[48] 27 June 2006[49] 3 years, 118 days Reserves coach
Scotland Ian Durrant 27 June 2006[49] 30 June 2008 2 years, 3 days Reserves coach
Scotland Tommy Wilson 30 June 2008 14 March 2013[50] 4 years, 257 days Reserves Manager
Scotland Billy Kirkwood (Interim) 14 March 2013 2 July 2013 110 days Senior Academy manager
Scotland Gordon Durie 2 July 2013[51] 23 December 2014[52] 1 year, 174 days Under-20s coach
Scotland Ian Durrant 23 December 2014[52] 9 June 2016[53] 1 year, 169 days Under-20s coach
Scotland Graeme Murty 22 August 2016[54] 26 October 2017[55] 1 year, 65 days Head Development squad coach
Scotland Billy Kirkwood (Interim) 26 October 2017 6 June 2018 223 days Head Development Squad coach
Scotland Graeme Murty 6 June 2018[56] 30 June 2020 2 years, 24 days Head Development Squad coach
Scotland Kevin Thomson
Scotland Brian Gilmour
30 June 2020[57] 1 July 2021 1 year, 1 day Joint B-Team coaches
Scotland David McCallum
Scotland Brian Gilmour
1 July 2021 1 October 2023 3 years, 92 days Joint B-Team coaches
Scotland David McCallum 1 October 2023[58] 103 days B-Team coach

Staff

As of June 2023[59]

Position Name
Academy directorZeb Jacobs
Head of academy footballZurab Amirian
B team head coachDavid McCallum
B team assistant coachMalky Thomson
U18 head coachSteven Smith
Lead PDP performance coachCalum MacMaster
Lead youth development phase and Boclair Academy coachGreg Statt
U15/16 lead coachLaurie Ellis
Youth development phase coachKieran Reilly
U11/U12 lead foundation phase coachJohn Lawson
Foundation phase coachesWilliam Brown
Marc McGhee
Michael McPake
Head of academy goalkeepingGraeme Smith
U18 goalkeeping coachConor Brennan
Goalkeeping coachesDerek Gaston
Alan Karas
Academy physiotherapistPaul Griffin
Head of academy sports scienceJamie Ramsden
Girls academy manager and academy coachTodd Lumsden
Head of children's academyAlan Boyd
Head of soccer academies & international relationsGary Gibson
International soccer academy managerIain Greer

Honours

League

Cup

  • Scottish 2nd XI Cup: (24)[62]
    • 1890, 1898, 1899, 1907, 1912, 1913, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1933, 1937, 1938, 1941, 1952, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1968, 1970, 1977, 1979
  • Scottish Reserve League Cup: (12)[63]
    • 1946, 1954, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1993, 1997, 1998
  • Scottish Youth Cup: (8)
  • Glasgow Cup: (14)
    • 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2018, 2022
  • Milk Cup: (2) (Premier)
    • 1984, 1992
  • Milk Cup: (Junior)
    • 1985
  • Festival Cup: (U-20)[64]
    • 2002
  • Iris Club International Tournament: (2) (U-19)[65]
    • 1979, 1981
  • Gothia Cup: (U-18)[66]
    • 1987
  • Alkass International Cup: (U-17)
    • 2019
  • Club Academy Scotland U-16 League Cup:
    • 2022

Academy legacy

Financial return

With the opening of the club's training facility for its youth and first teams, it was hoped that this would spell a new chapter in player development for the club.[67] However, expectations of an instant success were not accurate and with reported running costs of the facility equalling £1.5m,[67] many commentators asked if the investment in the training ground and youth department was worthwhile.[68]

The combined transfer fees for all Academy graduates is, to date, approximately £30m. This includes the transfer of Nathan Patterson, the single largest fee received in the club's history for any player.[69] Some of the other transfers that have commanded fees were in the form of compensation. The list below includes players who have been schooled at the club's Academy and have commanded a transfer upon their departure.

First-team graduates transfer fees received
# Name and nationality Date of transfer New club Initial fee Add ons Total fee
1Scotland Steven MacLean7 July 2004Sheffield Wednesday England£0.125m[70]Red X£0.125m
2Tunisia Hamed Namouchi31 August 2006Lorient France£0.5m[71]Red X£0.5m
3Scotland Alan Hutton30 January 2008Tottenham Hotspur England£9m[69]Red X£9m
4South Africa Dean Furman1 June 2009Oldham Athletic England£0.05m[72]Red X£0.05m
5Scotland Charlie Adam4 August 2009Blackpool England£0.5m[73]Green tick[74]£1.35m
6Scotland Danny Wilson21 July 2010Liverpool England£2m[75]Green tick£4.7m
7Scotland Dylan McGeouch15 May 2011Celtic Scotland£0.1m[76]Red X£0.1m
8Norway Thomas Kind Bendiksen1 January 2012Tromsø Norway£0.25m[77]Red X£0.25m
9Scotland Charlie Telfer31 May 2014Dundee United Scotland£0.204m[78]Red X£0.204m
10Scotland Lewis Macleod1 January 2015Brentford England£0.85m[79]Red X£0.85m
11Scotland Billy Gilmour1 July 2017Chelsea England£0.5m[80][81]Green tick[82]£1.5m
12Scotland Barrie McKay5 July 2017Nottingham Forest England£0.5m[83]Red X£0.5m
13Scotland Ryan Hardie17 July 2019Blackpool England£0.15m[84]Red X£0.15m
14Democratic Republic of the Congo Serge Atakayi30 December 2019SJK Finland£0.1m[85]Red X£0.1m
15Scotland Adedire Mebude3 August 2020Manchester City England£0.1m[86][87]Green tick[88]£0.347m
16Scotland Ross McCrorie1 February 2021Aberdeen Scotland£0.35m[89]Green tick[90]£0.55m
17England Nathan Young-Coombes9 June 2022Brentford England£0.1m[91][92]Red X£0.1m
18Scotland Nathan Patterson4 January 2022Everton England£11.5m[93]Green tick£16m
19Scotland Rory Wilson16 June 2023Aston Villa England£0.35m[94][95]Red X£0.35m

List of Academy graduates

Below is a list of players who made a first-team appearance for Rangers, whilst a youth team player at the club. This includes both players that have come through the club's Academy set-up and also young professional players signed for the Academy who then go on to play in the first-team. The list includes all youth team graduates from the opening of the Rangers Training Centre in 2001 to the present day.

Players in bold are currently at the club.

First-team graduates
# Name and nationality Date of debut Age at debut Apps Goals Pro debut Int caps
1Scotland Allan McGregor[96]24 February 200220 years, 24 days5050Green tickGreen tick
2Scotland Chris Burke[97]20 March 200218 years, 108 days13114Green tickGreen tick
3Scotland Tom Brighton[98]12 May 200218 years, 45 days10Green tickRed X
4Scotland Andy Dowie[98]12 May 200219 years, 48 days10Green tickRed X
5Scotland Alan Hutton[99]22 December 200218 years, 22 days1224Green tickGreen tick
6Scotland Steven MacLean[99]22 December 200220 years, 121 days40Green tickRed X
7Scotland Darryl Duffy[100]28 October 200319 years, 195 days30Green tickRed X
8Tunisia Hamed Namouchi[101]10 January 200419 years, 330 days516Red XGreen tick
9North Macedonia Bajram Fetai23 March 200418 years, 198 days10Red XGreen tick
10Scotland Alex Walker4 April 200419 years, 345 days20Green tickRed X
11Scotland Charlie Adam14 April 200418 years, 126 days8818Green tickGreen tick
12Scotland Gary MacKenzie[102]1 May 200418 years, 199 days20Green tickRed X
13Scotland Ross McCormack[102]1 May 200417 years, 257 days144Green tickGreen tick
14Scotland Bob Davidson16 May 200418 years, 52 days10Green tickRed X
15Scotland Steven Smith28 November 200418 years, 90 days1105Green tickRed X
16Scotland Alan Lowing[103]20 September 200517 years, 256 days50Green tickRed X
17Antigua and Barbuda Moses Ashikodi[104]23 April 200618 years, 300 days10Red XGreen tick
18England Lee Robinson[105]7 May 200619 years, 309 days100Green tickRed X
19France William Stanger[106]14 December 200621 years, 86 days10Red XRed X
20Scotland Steven Lennon[107]27 December 200618 years, 341 days30Green tickRed X
21Scotland Andrew Shinnie[108]17 March 200717 years, 243 days20Green tickGreen tick
22Scotland Paul Emslie[109]26 September 200719 years, 197 days10Green tickRed X
23Scotland John Fleck[110]23 January 200816 years, 152 days583Green tickGreen tick
24South Africa Dean Furman[111]10 May 200819 years, 262 days10Green tickGreen tick
25Scotland Rory Loy[112]1 November 200820 years, 227 days20Green tickRed X
26Northern Ireland Andrew Little[113]25 April 200919 years, 348 days8938Green tickGreen tick
27Scotland Gregg Wylde[114]29 August 200918 years, 159 days482Green tickRed X
28Scotland Jordan McMillan[115]27 October 200921 years, 11 days50Red XRed X
29Scotland Danny Wilson[115]27 October 200917 years, 304 days1075Green tickGreen tick
30Scotland Kyle Hutton[116]14 August 201019 years, 180 days722Green tickRed X
31Scotland Darren Cole[117]7 December 201018 years, 338 days50Green tickRed X
32Scotland Jamie Ness[118]26 December 201019 years, 299 days182Green tickRed X
33England Kane Hemmings[119]3 August 201120 years, 117 days101Green tickRed X
34Scotland Ross Perry[120]13 August 201121 years, 187 days330Red XRed X
35Norway Thomas Kind Bendiksen[121]3 December 201122 years, 117 days30Green tickGreen tick
36Scotland Rhys McCabe[122]3 March 201219 years, 233 days90Green tickRed X
37Northern Ireland Andrew Mitchell[123]17 March 201219 years, 344 days100Green tickRed X
38Scotland Barrie McKay[124]13 May 201217 years, 135 days14020Green tickGreen tick
39Scotland Lewis Macleod[125]29 July 201218 years, 43 days7416Green tickRed X
40Scotland Kal Naismith[125]29 July 201220 years, 162 days243Red XRed X
41Scotland Robbie Crawford[125]29 July 201219 years, 132 days577Green tickRed X
42Northern Ireland Chris Hegarty[126]21 August 201220 years, 8 days311Green tickRed X
43Canada Fraser Aird[127]23 September 201217 years, 234 days8512Green tickGreen tick
44Scotland Tom Walsh[128]8 December 201216 years, 150 days130Green tickRed X
45Canada Luca Gasparotto[129]13 April 201317 years, 222 days40Green tickRed X
46Scotland Danny Stoney[130]13 April 201316 years, 343 days30Green tickRed X
47Scotland Andy Murdoch[131]27 April 201318 years, 87 days231Green tickRed X
48Scotland Scott Gallacher[132]28 July 201324 years, 13 days60Red XRed X
49Scotland Kyle McAusland[133]28 July 201320 years, 190 days70Red XRed X
50Scotland Calum Gallagher[134]15 March 201419 years, 183 days61Red XRed X
51Scotland Charlie Telfer[135]19 April 201418 years, 289 days10Green tickRed X
52Scotland Ryan Hardie[136]23 September 201417 years, 190 days172Green tickRed X
53Northern Ireland Jordan Thompson[137]7 November 201518 years, 308 days30Green tickGreen tick
54Scotland Liam Burt[138]1 March 201617 years, 29 days30Green tickRed X
55Malta Myles Beerman[139]5 April 201718 years, 23 days80Green tickGreen tick
56Scotland Jamie Barjonas[140]7 May 201718 years, 103 days90Green tickRed X
57Scotland Aidan Wilson[141]17 May 201718 years, 135 days20Green tickRed X
58Scotland Kyle Bradley[142]21 May 201718 years, 96 days10Green tickRed X
59Scotland Ross McCrorie[143]19 September 201719 years, 185 days552Red XRed X
60Scotland Glenn Middleton[144]12 July 201818 years, 192 days295Green tickRed X
61Scotland Stephen Kelly[145]26 September 201818 years, 166 days30Green tickRed X
62Democratic Republic of the Congo Serge Atakayi[146]11 November 201819 years, 285 days10Red XRed X
63Scotland Jordan Houston[147]30 January 201919 years, 10 days10Green tickRed X
64Scotland Dapo Mebude[148]19 May 201917 years, 294 days10Green tickRed X
65Scotland Josh McPake[149]18 July 201917 years, 321 days10Green tickRed X
66Scotland Nathan Patterson[150]17 January 202018 years, 93 days272Green tickGreen tick
67Scotland Kai Kennedy[151]17 January 202017 years, 295 days10Green tickRed X
68Scotland Ciaran Dickson[152]29 November 202018 years, 192 days10Green tickRed X
69Scotland Leon King[152]29 November 202016 years, 320 days310Green tickRed X
70Scotland Robby McCrorie[153]26 August 202123 years, 161 days60Red XRed X
71Scotland Alex Lowry[154]21 January 202218 years, 212 days142Green tickRed X
72Northern Ireland Charlie McCann[155]12 February 202219 years, 294 days80Green tickRed X
73Scotland Adam Devine[156]8 May 202219 years, 44 days110Red XRed X
74Scotland Cole McKinnon[157]14 May 202219 years, 105 days11Red XRed X
75Northern Ireland Ross McCausland[157]14 May 202219 years, 2 days90Green tickGreen tick
76England Tony Weston[157]14 May 202218 years, 239 days10Red XRed X
77Scotland Robbie Ure[158]30 August 202218 years, 185 days31Green tickRed X
78England Zak Lovelace[158]30 August 202216 years, 219 days40Red XRed X
79England Paul Nsio[158]30 August 202216 years, 168 days10Green tickRed X
80England Archie Stevens[158]30 August 202216 years, 231 days10Green tickRed X
81Scotland Bailey Rice[159]18 February 202316 years, 137 days30Green tickRed X
82Scotland Arron Lyall[160]21 May 202319 years, 236 days10Red XRed X
83England Johnly Yfeko[161]19 August 202320 years, 149 days10Green tickRed X

References

  1. "New Academy Stand Opens". Rangers.co.uk. Rangers FC. 2 August 2019. Archived from the original on 28 August 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Reserve Leagues". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Archived from the original on 28 January 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  3. 1 2 "Reserve Scottish League". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  4. Campbell, Tom; Woods, Pat (1992). A Celtic A - Z. Greenfield Press. p. 160. ISBN 095195010X.
  5. "John also did a spell as a youth development officer at Ibrox". Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  6. "McLean makes Rangers return". BBC Sport website. 11 May 2001. Archived from the original on 26 February 2003. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  7. "Rangers recruit Fergie scout". BBC Sport. BBC. 14 February 2003. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
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