St Johnstone 0-3 Rangers: Visitors go two points clear at top of Scottish Premiership

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Rangers players celebratingImage source, SNS
Image caption,

James Tavernier's two penalties made sure of the points for Rangers

Rangers are now playing as a "collective", not as "islands", says manager Philippe Clement after his side moved top of the Scottish Premiership.

Sunday's 3-0 victory over St Johnstone in Perth opened up a two-point gap over defending champions Celtic.

Mohamed Diomande struck Rangers' first and James Tavernier converted two VAR-awarded penalties.

"They know it's still a long way to go. They feel really good. This season is a long marathon," Clement said.

"We have three competitions still to play for. They also feel it's a big difference now compared with the beginning of the season, where it was much more islands and not a collective together; that this is a much better world to live in for them."

Having been seven points behind after losing to Aberdeen in September in what proved to be Michael Beale's last game in charge, the Ibrox side have erred little since under the Belgian.

However, with 12 league games to play each, the situation at the top is still very tight with Rangers having scored two fewer goals than Celtic while conceding five fewer.

Craig Levein's Saints remain 10th, five points above Ross County and eight in front of Livingston.

The opening 36 minutes came and went without so much as a significant attempt, never mind one on target.

But, when such an effort arrived, it was impressive as Diomande took one touch to control Ryan McGowan's clearance and struck fiercely past Dimitar Mitov.

It was the midfielder's first goal since joining Rangers on loan from Nordsjaelland last month, with a permanent move to be completed in the summer.

Rangers' confidence was growing, as was their territorial advantage. Todd Cantwell flicked an effort wide and St Johnstone had to scramble clear a couple of dangerous moments to get to the break one down.

Fabio Silva almost put the game beyond Saints early in the second half as his snapshot brought out the best in Mitov.

St Johnstone knew they needed to change the pattern of the game to avoid defeat and Tavernier's aerial challenge on Connor Smith provoked home hopes of a penalty, quickly dashed by referee Matthew MacDermid.

Dujon Sterling, on for Scott Wright at half-time, missed a big chance to double Rangers' lead when he glanced a header wide from Cantwell's cross.

It was one of Cantwell's last contributions as he made way for Tom Lawrence and strapped ice to his leg on the bench.

St Johnstone almost found themselves level when John Lundstram's defensive header at a free-kick flicked just over.

However, the game began to get away from the hosts after Sterling went down following Andy Considine's sliding challenge.

Referee MacDermid was initially unmoved, but VAR intervened and the referee decided a spot-kick should be awarded. Tavernier's finish to the goalkeeper's left was emphatic.

Cyriel Dessers took over from Silva and almost got round Mitov to net a third for Rangers but slightly overran it and allowed Liam Gordon to usher the ball out.

Dessers then hit the crossbar in the build-up to Rangers' second penalty, ultimately awarded for a hand ball against Luke Robinson following Lawrence's shot.

And, with Tavernier's second conversion, Rangers knew they would be returning to Glasgow with victory.

Player of the match - Mohamed Diomande (Rangers)

Image source, SNS
Image caption,

January signing Mohamed Diomande fully announced his arrival at Rangers with an excellent goal and a fine midfield display

Keeping initiative now the challenge for Rangers - analysis

Clement has been adamant in recent times that he is not "busy" with what Celtic or anyone else is doing, only "busy" with Rangers.

So far, that approach has worked with 22 wins from 26 games and nine wins out of nine in all competitions so far in 2024.

The initiative is now theirs, but defending champions Celtic's vast experience in winning league titles and two more Old Firm derbies to play before the season's end mean Rangers can be anything other than complacent.

For St Johnstone, Saturday's defeat for County at Dundee softens the blow of this loss, but Livingston's first win since October shows the Perth side still have work to do to preserve their top-flight status.

What the managers said

St Johnstone manager Craig Levein: "We competed well for the 90 minutes. Things changed with about 20 minutes to go because we had to try and get something goals-wise. Most of Rangers' chances came in that period.

"It's another two VAR goals. They must be the top scorers in the league this year, VAR. The second one I don't think is anything like a penalty. The first one was a reasonable decision."

Rangers manager Philippe Clement: "Another three important points. I'm proud about the team because they had to adapt to circumstances. We could not play on this pitch our normal football. Dominated the game."[Mohamed Diomande's opener was] a really important goal and it's also one of the reasons we wanted to sign him. A really talented player with a really good mentality. It's crazy the amount of goals [James Tavernier] has scored already. There will not be many defenders who score that many goals in their career."

What's next?

Both sides have six days off with Rangers at home to Heart of Midlothian in the Scottish Premiership on Saturday (15:00 GMT), with St Johnstone away to St Mirren at the same time.

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