Rangers 3-2 Partick Thistle: Holders did the right thing by letting visitors score, says Beale
- Published
Rangers "won in the right way" after allowing Partick Thistle to equalise in a tumultuous Scottish Cup tie at Ibrox, said manager Michael Beale.
Thistle levelled unopposed through Scott Tiffoney when the visitors complained Malik Tillman had been unsportsmanlike when making it 2-1.
The midfielder had intercepted the ball as the Championship side intended to surrender possession from a throw-in.
"It was a big misunderstanding, the whole thing," said Beale.
"Malik gets injured. We play the ball out. Malik's on the floor, he's unaware that we've played the ball out so when he gets up, he just thinks it's a throw-in to Partick Thistle. He presses innocently and then he's through on goal and he goes and finishes the move.
"I don't want us to win a football game on a misunderstanding and it was a misunderstanding. It would've been the wrong thing to do. I've got high standards but the club I work for has got high standards as well and as Rangers Football Club, we're in a better place tonight that we did that. It's not an easy thing to do, trust me. We won the game, we won the game in the right way."
Partick Thistle boss Ian McCall commented: "I don't think Malik Tillman knew what he was doing. I think he got mixed up and put it in the net.
"Michael Beale showed an awful lot of class, so did James Tavernier to do what they did. It was the right to do so there's no blame on anybody, not even the ref. I've been involved in the game since 1981 - I've never seen it before."
Antonio Colak and James Sands also scored for Rangers, who came from behind to book their place in Monday's quarter-final draw with Ayr United, Celtic, Hearts, Kilmarnock, Inverness Caledonian Thistle, Raith Rovers and Darvel or Falkirk.
The hosts had a nervous moment early on when Tillman tussled with Holt on the very edge of the Rangers penalty area but referee David Munro offered the 2,500-strong travelling Thistle support no encouragement.
The visitors held their own with a disciplined defensive approach and a determination not to allow their hosts time and space. Kyle Turner won and took a free-kick that tested Allan McGregor - and the goalkeeper was forced into an even better stop to deny Tiffoney moments later.
But, in the aftermath, the visitors were awarded their spot-kick. Munro was asked to review whether Kevin Holt's header had been handled by Colak and the referee signalled penalty. Holt converted confidently.
Rangers' play had been too narrow and their short passing game food and drink for the Jags. Ibrox manager Michael Beale took action at half-time with Ryan Kent and Kemar Roofe sent on in place of Ianis Hagi and Todd Cantwell. And there was almost instant reward. Kent sent Roofe through and the striker fired narrowly wide.
The leveller duly arrived when Nicolas Raskin chipped from the inside right channel for Colak to nod in. The Croatian had gone nine games without a goal since his last on 29 October.
The keeper may have done better with that one but stood up well to block Colak's next effort and made his mark again by saving a Rangers' penalty.
Tillman was dragged down by Stuart Bannigan, who was adamant the foul had taken place outside the box. The award stood but so did Sneddon as he stayed in a central position to get in the way of Tavernier's spot-kick.
But then, another jaw-dropping twist. Rangers put the ball out after Tillman pulled up with a knock and, after the restart, Tillman robbed Holt and evaded chasing defenders and Sneddon to score. Thistle were furious, insisting the Rangers attacker had stolen the ball just as they were about to kick it back to the home defence.
A melee ensued on the pitch and Beale was active in his technical area, with the instruction given before Tiffoney sauntered forward from the re-start to round McGregor and score.
It was from a Borna Barisic corner that the decisive goal came, but again confusion reigned. Sands threw himself at the ball and celebrated when the net bulged but replays suggested Thistle's Connor McAvoy may have knocked it over the line.
Tillman danced away from a clutch of challenges only to be denied by Sneddon in added time, the last major incident of an enthralling Scottish Cup tie.
Player of the match - Nicolas Raskin
What they said
Rangers manager Michael Beale: "It was right to make the changes in the second half. I didn't think the performance was great. To be fair to the character and mentality of the players, they have found a way to win."
Partick Thistle manager Ian McCall: "We're full of pride but full of disappointment as well. The players were absolutely magnificent. First half, I thought we were terrific. They allowed us to score the goal to get us to 2-2 and then it was game on, And, unfortunately Rangers scored from a set play."