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Daily Record
6 minutes ago
- Daily Record
I've a major Rangers takeaway after remarkable tale and Celtic face competition kryptonite
Former Ibrox chairman Paul Murray sat down with the Hotline Live team in a blockbuster exclusive after playing a key role in the US takeover Above all else there was one major take away from Paul Murray 's guest appearance on Hotline Live the other day. And the tens of thousands of you who have watched the special edition of our online show already may have reached the same conclusion. This is a man, let's not forget, who has spent most of the last 15 years running around in various states of emotional exhaustion given the extent of his concerns for Rangers Football Club. And, over that time, each and every one of them were proved to be more than valid. Yet there he was on Friday afternoon, in a Daily Record studio, telling his remarkable story apparently without a care in the world. And that's the take away right there. If Paul Murray has entered a zen like state then it stands to reason that things as we know them are about to change. For the first time since late 2010, when Craig Whyte slithered into view, Murray now feels able to sit back, put his feet up and enjoy the show. Having played a key role in facilitating Andrew Cavenagh and his consortium to successfully conclude their takeover, it is Murray's firmly held belief that Rangers are finally out of the red zone and that his own work here is done. All of which should come as great comfort to his fellow supporters who have also been forced to fret over the wellbeing of their club for so long. But this sudden change in the mood music around Ibrox should also send out a signal to the side from across town which has proven itself to be so adept at staying ahead of the curve and making hay while the sun has been shining. So successful have Celtic become throughout this period of unprecedented domestic dominance that it's actually difficult even just to imagine any genuine threat being offered up to their supremacy. Thirteen titles out of the last 14 is testament to the scale of this monopoly and there are some from the east end of Glasgow who will be rolling their eyes at the very suggestion that Cavenagh's Rangers ought to be treated with renewed levels of respect. They've heard it all so many times before that they've become utterly bored by it. Many of them no longer even regard Rangers as a serious, worthy rival. On the contrary, the perpetually down on their luck neighbours are there mostly for their amusement. As far as they are concerned, after witnessing a long succession of rinse and repeat summer rebuilds, Rangers are nothing more than the boy who cried wolf. And if that remains the prevailing attitude this time around, even though the Americans have moved in next door, then that would be perfectly understandable too. Celtic have more than earned the right to see themselves as the rulers of this particular roost given the trophies that have been stock piled in the boardroom over the last decade or so as well as the bloated state of the club's bank balance. With Brendan Rodgers at the helm and this elite level manager eyeing up a fifth successive league flag, the champions ought to be more than robust enough to cope with whatever Cavenagh might have in mind. But, even so, they too probably ought to take heed of Murray's sudden switch in mindset. Because, if he is right and if Rangers really are about to become a relevant, credible force again, then it could come as a timely shot in the arm for their club too. What Celtic cannot afford is to become complacent or lulled into a false sense of never ending security. And competition is complacency's kryptonite. So perhaps on this occasion it might be healthy for the club and its hierarchy to assume that the ground might be about to shift beneath their feet after all. And to do something meaningful about it. For example, when Russell Martin confirmed during a TV interview last week that he is indeed serious about pursuing a deal for Crystal Palace winger Jeserun Rak-Sakyi, Celtic may have felt the first minor tremor. If Rangers are even considering entering into a loan deal for a player and taking on an obligation to buy Ray-Sakyi outright for a fee of around £8m, then it does indeed point to a significant raising of the stakes. The sheer size of the figures involved certainly suggests that, under Cavenagh and his friends from the San Francisco 49ers, Rangers will no longer be scrambling around down the back of the couch looking for some loose change whenever the transfer window opens up for business. Whether ultimately they thrash out a deal for the 22-year-old or not, the very fact that Martin has publicly declared an interest feels like a statement of intention. It shows that Rangers see themselves as credible operators in the recruitment market and that alone ought to be enough to up the ante where Celtic's current dealings are concerned. It may also demand a rush of urgency. For his part, Rodgers has been giving off some mixed messages over the last couple of weeks in terms of the strategy which is being deployed in the hunt for some much needed squad reinforcements as well as a handful of first XI upgrades. Having initially described Hayato Inamura as a 'club investment' and a new arrival who would probably be sent out on loan, the Irishman appeared to be putting some distance between himself and that particular signing. Reading between the lines, Rodgers seemed to be suggesting that there might be two separate tiers to Celtic's approach to recruitment this summer. One drawn up by the men above and one charted out by the manager himself. He made a point of pivoting back from that position last week in Como when he made a point of stressing that he and the club remain perfectly aligned in their priorities. Which is all well and fine. But it does beg the rather obvious question, why say such a thing in the first place? And it doesn't address the burning issue of a clear and obvious deficit in quality at the manager's disposal since the sales of Kyogo Furuhashi and Nicolas Kuhn as well as the injury which will keep Jota on a treatment table for the rest of this year. Nor the fact that the top flight kicks off with a visit from St Mirren in six days' time and there is less than a month to go before a £50m play-off for a place in the league phase of this season's Champions League. Celtic will do significant business before the window closes. Rodgers will almost certainly add some very pricey improvements to his starting line up. But the clock is ticking and this summer, for the first time in a long while, they can't simply assume that the neighbours will be in no fit shape to keep up.


New Indian Express
34 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
US-EU trade deal wards off further escalation but will raise costs for companies and consumers
FRANKFURT: President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen have announced a sweeping trade deal that imposes 15% tariffs on most European goods, warding off Trump's threat of a 30% rate if no deal had been reached by Aug. 1. The tariffs, or import taxes, paid when Americans buy European products could raise prices for U.S. consumers and dent profits for European companies and their partners who bring goods into the country. Here are some things to know about the trade deal between the United States and the European Union: Many details remain to be decided Trump and von der Leyen's announcement, made during Trump's visit to one of his golf courses in Scotland, leaves many details to be filled in. The headline figure is a 15% tariff rate on 'the vast majority' of European goods brought into the U.S., including cars, computer chips and pharmaceuticals. It's lower than the 20% Trump initially proposed, and lower than his threats of 50% and then 30%. Von der Leyen said the two sides agreed on zero tariffs on both sides for a range of 'strategic' goods: Aircraft and aircraft parts, certain chemicals, semiconductor equipment, certain agricultural products, and some natural resources and critical raw materials. Specifics were lacking. She said the two sides 'would keep working' to add more products to the list. Additionally, the EU side would purchase what Trump said was $750 billion (638 billion euros) worth of natural gas, oil and nuclear fuel to replace Russian energy supplies, and Europeans would invest an additional $600 billion (511 billion euros) in the U.S. 50% U.S. tariff on steel stays and others might, too Trump said the 50% U.S. tariff on imported steel would remain; von der Leyen said the two sides agreed to further negotiations to fight a global steel glut, reduce tariffs and establish import quotas — that is, set amounts that can be imported, often at a lower rate. Trump said pharmaceuticals were not included in the deal. Von der Leyen said the pharmaceuticals issue was 'on a separate sheet of paper' from Sunday's deal. Where the $600 billion for additional investment would come from was not specified. And von der Leyen said that when it came to farm products, the EU side made clear that 'there were tariffs that could not be lowered,' without specifying which products.


Indian Express
37 minutes ago
- Indian Express
US commerce secretary says Trump really likes TikTok, but app has to move to US ownership
U.S. President Donald Trump likes TikTok but the Chinese-owned short video app, used by some 170 million Americans, has to move to U.S. ownership, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said on Sunday. 'The President really likes TikTok, and he said it over and over again, because, you know, it was a good way to communicate with young people,' Lutnick said in an interview on Fox News Sunday with Shannon Bream. 'But let's face it, you can't have the Chinese have an app on 100 million American phones, that is just not okay. So, it's got to move to American ownership, it's got to move to American technology, American algorithms,' he said. 'I know the President is positive towards TikTok, if it can move into American hands.'