St Mirren 0-4 Rangers: Kemar Roofe hat-trick powers visitors to victory
- Published
Kemar Roofe says he has "already proved" he can shoulder the burden of leading Rangers' line without injured Alfredo Morelos after a ruthless hat-trick sank St Mirren on Sunday.
Roofe's goals, and a Joe Aribo stunner, returned Rangers to within six points of Scottish Premiership leaders Celtic.
The Ibrox side are without top scorer Morelos for the rest of the season as Roofe hit 15 goals for the campaign.
"I have proved it already," the striker told Sky Sports.
"Regardless of today or the last game. I have been here for nearly two years and I feel that I have proved this already.
"We knew St Mirren would put up a good fight but we managed to break them down and get the goals."
Manager Giovanni van Bronckhorst is confident John Lundstram will be fit for Thursday's Europa League quarter-final second leg against Braga after a first-half groin problem forced him off, but must await the results of a scan on injury-ravaged defender Filip Helander.
St Mirren - with one win in nine since Stephen Robinson took charge - are not clear of relegation strife, sitting six points above 11th-placed St Johnstone.
After the grim Old Firm derby defeat and the first-leg loss to Braga, Rangers needed to end a brutal week with renewed positivity. So, too, did Roofe. His largely fruitless starting role against Celtic, and 28 minutes off the bench in Portugal, will have stung.
The striker provided the perfect tonic two minutes in. Connor Goldson's terrific diagonal parabola allowed James Tavernier to scurry in behind down the right and cross on the volley. It came to Ryan Kent on the opposite flank, and his curled delivery was neatly nodded home by Roofe.
As the half expired, Roofe pounced again, slapping the wind out of St Mirren's billowing sails as Robinson's troops scrapped diligently in a tepid 45 minutes. Another Tavernier delivery; another fabulously taken header.
Roofe was at the heart of the half's only other chances of note, twice delicately laying into the path of Aaron Ramsey.
Rangers' marquee signing could have done better with the first, steering tamely at Dean Lyness from the edge of the box, and absolutely should have converted the second, thundering off the crossbar from six yards out. Moments later, Roofe's header spared his blushes.
The Jamaica international does not possess the same brawny presence as the stricken Alfredo Morelos, sidelined for the season, nor can he haul Rangers up the pitch as manfully, but his instincts are pin-sharp. His capacity to seek out space where there seems to be none, to free himself of defenders inside teeming penalty boxes, came to the fore again and again.
His first Rangers hat-trick was sealed soon after the break. Aribo and Fashion Sakala combined cleverly down the left edge of the box before cutting back for Roofe, who lashed in at the second attempt.
The rest of the day was a procession for Rangers. Scott Wright then Amad Diallo should have made it 4-0. Aribo did with a jaw-dropping 20-yard swerver into the top-left corner.
The only elements of concern for van Bronckhorst were first-half injuries to Lundstram, a massive player for the manager of late, and Helander, who has not long returned from knee trouble.
In the main, though, this day belonged to Roofe. With Braga and an Old Firm Scottish Cup semi-final to come, the striker and his team needed this lift in a season-defining week.
Man of the match - Kemar Roofe
What did we learn?
If, by benching Roofe on Thursday night, Van Bronckhorst was throwing down a gauntlet, the striker responded spectacularly.
While his strengths are different to those of Morelos, he proved his penalty-box ruthlessness when properly supplied, and must surely start at Ibrox in the monumental return leg.
In between Roofe's first and second, St Mirren threatened down the left, former Rangers winger Jordan Jones running at Tavernier, linking well with Connor Ronan and Eamonn Brophy, but created no clear-cut openings.
Defensively, they were unpicked far too easily and while they scrapped well in the midfield trenches, the bruising run of form cannot continue if they are to avoid a harrowing end to the campaign.
What did they say?
St Mirren manager Stephen Robinson: "After losing the early goal, we stayed disciplined and our shape was good - they weren't breaking us down, but when you lose the goal just before the break, it makes it a completely different team talk.
"Ultimately they won the game comfortably because we were chasing the game after that There's only two points between us and seventh, so it's still in our hands to finish as high as possible."
Rangers manager Giovanni van Bronckhorst told Sky Sports: "I am very happy for (Kemar Roofe). We said before the game we needed to win and we did.
"We won 4-0, no goals against us andit gives us confidence for Thursday and the games ahead. But we're also confident that we can get a win at home in Europe like we've showed in the past."
What's next?
St Mirren await the announcement of the Premiership post-split fixtures, while Rangers host Braga on Thursday at 20:00 BST, before facing Celtic at Hampden three days later (14:00).