Nacho Novo chose the perfect afternoon to end his goal drought as a miracle at
Motherwell handed Rangers the Bank of Scotland Premier League crown in
extraordinary circumstances.
Rangers had arrived at Hibernian knowing they had to win to have any chance of
snatching the title from Celtic on the final day of the season and Novo's
59th-minute strike provided that.
And as Rangers and Hibernian played out a scoreline that would also ensure
UEFA Cup football for the home side next season, thousands of ears instead
became glued to radios in the hope of good news.
Few had expected Celtic to surrender the lead at Motherwell they needed to
retain the title but two late Scott McDonald goals at Fir Park provided just that
sensational ending to a remarkable season.
McDonald is an Australian but his parents are Scottish. One supports Rangers,
the other Celtic and it was his late, late contributions that set up a scenario
that mirrored the last-day drama of the 2002-03 season.
Rangers had triumphed on that day too, on goal difference after both Old Firm
sides had won heavily, and now manager Alex McLeish, who might have been fired
earlier in the season following indifferent results at home and abroad is top
dog in Scotland once more.
Hibernian had been keen to underline the fact that they had plenty to play for
as well and started strongly.
Derek Riordan and Garry O'Connor both fired in early testers and the latter
was only inches away from opening the scoring in the 10th minute.
That was via a flicked header from Stephen Glass' free-kick from the right
that saw the ball skim over Ronald Waterreus' crossbar from fewer than six yards
out.
A Rangers response was required and within a minute Novo almost opened the
scoring.
Home goalkeeper Simon Brown was the man who had put his side in jeopardy by
mis-judging the bounce of a long ball forward from Alex Rae. Novo was on to it
in a flash but when he attempted to find an empty net from a tight angle on the
right he ended up rolling the ball against the near post.
Novo's next attempt, in the 25th minute, did find the net but the Rangers'
fans' excitement at the other end lasted only for the split-second before it
became obvious that only the side of the rigging had been found, with the
jittery Brown again beaten.
The half hour mark was greeted with an increase in the volume levels from both
sets of supporters but only because news of Chris Sutton's opener at Fir Park
had reached the capital.
Tackles had already been flying in by this point but the play became even more
frenzied, with Alex Rae often in the thick of the midfield action.
The Rangers man was the victim of the first booking however, which was given
to Guillaume Beuzelin in the 36th minute for an over-zealous challenge.
Rangers' recent good form had featured promising performances from Thomas
Buffel but the Belgian play-maker had been quiet until he fired straight at
goalkeeper Brown on the turn.
Gary Smith then made a vital block to deny Buffel after Dado Prso had headed
the ball into his path and when Marvin Andrews headed wide from a Michael Ball
free-kick Rangers were destined to go in at the break with their mission very
much in need of accomplishment.
Neither side made changes at the break and this time it was Rangers who
applied the early pressure.
Within a few minutes Prso had sent Buffel through with a flick but the Belgian
was denied by a superbly-timed challenge in the box by Steven Whittaker when
there was zero margin of error.
Buffel wasted another chance before the game was an hour old when he fired
over under pressure from Ian Murray, with the Ibrox-bound Hibs skipper having
gifted the ball to Novo in the first place.
News that Aberdeen were winning added an extra weight of pressure to both
sides as well and Riordan fired a free-kick wastefully from 25 yards.
The hour mark was fast approaching but so, the Hibs defence found, was Novo as
a passing move involving Prso and Buffel found the Spaniard on the right of the
box.
The shot that followed was not the sweetest he has ever struck but goalkeeper
Brown could only get a touch that did not prevent it bouncing over the line. It
was Novo's first league goal since March 2.
Riordan was booked for one foul too many in the 61st minute and Ivan Sproule's
afternoon ended in the 65th minute when he was replaced by Dean Shiels.
O'Connor was replaced by Amadou Konte three minutes later as Hibs sought to
hang on to their goal difference advantage over Aberdeen at the very least.
Scott Brown and Novo were both booked following a clash that saw Rangers
awarded a free-kick and Arveladze and Whittaker were hurt from it when they
clashed heads.
Antonio Murray became Hibs' third new face and he set up Glass for a low drive
that skidded just wide.
The game petered out after that as it became apparent that the scoreline would
suit both side's requirements. All Hibs wanted was no news of further Aberdeen
goals and indeed none came.
What information did arrive was remarkable nonetheless and as soon as the
final whistle was blown there was no hesitation from the Rangers players or
their fans. They knew that fortune had favoured them and were intent on making
the most of celebrating the fact.
Teams:
Hibernian Simon Brown, Whittaker, Caldwell, Smith, Ian Murray,
Sproule (Shiels 65), Scott Brown, Beuzelin (Antonio Murray 74),
Glass, O'Connor (Konte 68), Riordan.
Subs Not Used: Alistair Brown, Hogg, Murphy, Morrow.
Booked: Beuzelin, Ian Murray, Riordan, Scott Brown.
Rangers Waterreus, Ricksen, Andrews, Kyrgiakos, Ball,
Arveladze, Ferguson, Alex Rae, Buffel, Prso, Novo.
Subs Not Used: McGregor, Thompson, Malcolm, Burke, McCormack,
Steven Smith, Lovenkrands.
Booked: Novo.
Goals: Novo 59.
Att: 17,450
Ref: K Clark (Scotland).