
THE HARD WORK STARTS NOW! Teenage hero Findlay Curtis will know that he's achieved nothing yet, warns Rangers legend Ian Durrant
Six months after navigating the foothills by making his Rangers ' debut against Fraserburgh, Findlay Curtis breathed the rarefied air of Champions League football on Tuesday against Panathinaikos.
A first senior goal not only changed the complexion of the tie. At a stroke, the 19-year-old's world turned upside down.
He's no longer another face in the crowd. He now enjoys a public profile. The trade-off for that euphoric moment is that a level of expectation now follows.
Many have discovered this pressure to be suffocating. Long is the list of those who flew too close to the sun.
Ian Durrant remembers the day his own dreams were first realised like it was yesterday. Coming off the field after a 3-0 win at Cappielow on April 20, 1985, the then 18-year-old's first thought was to ensure his first game for his boyhood heroes wasn't his last.
'Morton away,' he smiled. 'Coisty got a hat-trick. Any more?'
There was actually. Durrant had all the talent in the world. Yet he counts himself fortunate that the club's financial position 40 years ago necessitated the promotion of young players. The door was open and he walked through it.
'I think what helped me then was the club was redeveloping at the stadium,' he recalled.
'So myself, Derek Ferguson, Robert Fleck and Hugh Burns were given the opportunity because there wasn't a lot of money to spend on players.
'We never really had the academy. We were more apprentices.
'I didn't think for a minute I'd be a Jock Wallace player as he liked ones who were six-foot plus and could head the ball further than I could kick it.
'But he came across on Friday and he just gave me two complimentary tickets.
'He just said: 'Right, you're playing tomorrow'. There was no time to think about it.
'That was it. Just get a good night's sleep. Cheers, gaffer. And you just go and play.'
Much has changed in football and society in the past 40 years, yet Durrant's experience back then still carries echoes of what Findlay is going through at the moment.
Now 58, Durrant simply looked upon the pressure to become a first-team regular as a privilege. He was a nailed-on starter by the time Graeme Souness arrived with an open cheque book in 1986.
While he can't walk in Findlay's shoes for him, he can tell him what's non-negotiable.
'You can't just kind of go: 'Okay, I've achieved something',' he warned.
'Findlay will be flying just now in terms of getting a goal in the Champions League qualifier.
'But he knows it will be a rocky road. Now it's a question of how he goes about it.
'That's when your manager and coaches have to see things. Just give him enough to feed him. But, if he performs like that, he'll be a starter.
'The young players, they're up down. The manager will know that. It's hard work all the time. If you don't put the hard work in, you'll not get it back.'
Thankfully, there appears to be no complacency in Curtis. Self-assured yet grounded as he spoke on Tuesday, the importance of his nearest and dearest shone through.
'Families play a big part,' said Durrant. 'I know for a fact he's still living with his parents. They'll give him the guidance.
'But also the manager and the coaches, they see him every day. You're a big fish in a small pond here.
'It's a different beat now. I was lucky enough when I made my debut that there were no mobile phones so you could get away with it a wee bit.
'They're consummate professionals now in terms of diet and everything. Everything gets monitored. He'll know how to cope with it.'
Durrant had more than a hunch that Curtis would be throw in this midweek.
Last week, together with Lee McCulloch and John Brown, he broke bread with Russell Martin at the club's training centre.
While it's nothing new to hear managers talk about promoting youth, Durrant left the get-together believing the new man at the helm meant all he said.
'He said if they're good enough, no matter the age, they'll get a game,' he said.
'I think the manager here can go and get players. He's taken, I wouldn't say a gamble, but he's got a good understanding of his best youth players. He's integrated them into training.'
It's all a delicate balancing act, of course, and incumbent on Martin to judge when to play his teenagers and when to rest them. Every side also needs experienced heads to educate the new boys.
'You're in a tunnel,' Durrant recalled of his formative years. 'I'm standing next to Graeme Souness. I lived a mile down the road and I'm playing with one of the finest Scottish midfielders.
Ibrox rose as one to salute the 19-year-old after he gave Russell Martin's team a precious lead
'I'm playing with an England captain (Terry Butcher), Chris Woods, Ray Wilkins, Trevor Francis. I lived the dream playing with David Cooper.
'Later on, Walter (Smith) had John Brown, Goughy, the Goalie (Andy Goram). Sometimes, we'd just police our own dressing room. If we knew it wasn't going right, we'd fix it.'
This is a different era with different faces, yet the level of expectation hasn't changed.
When Martin took the opportunity to ask questions of Durrant, McCulloch and Brown at Auchenhowie, the answers were short and to the point.
'We told him - you just need to win,' Durrant said.
'That's the be all and end all. Get the proper players, get your recruitment right.
'He was good, just the way he outlined the way he wants to go.
'He wants his team so fit. He said that. the way he plays, it might take the last 10-15 minutes to break teams down, but the only way they're going to break them down is if they're fitter than the other teams.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
an hour ago
- Metro
Why Beth Mead was allowed to take penalty twice in England's Euro 2025 triumph
There was yet more high drama and controversy as England overcame world champions Spain on penalties to successfully defend their European Championship title in Switzerland. For the third match in succession, the Lionesses were forced to come from behind to secure victory after Mariona Caldentey opened the scoring for Spain midway through the first half at Basel's St Jakob-Park. Having been introduced from the bench in place of the injured Lauren James, Chloe Kelly was once again England's super-sub hero as she delivered a pinpoint cross for Alessio Russo's 57th-minute header to make it all square. And it was Kelly's spot-kick at the end of a nerve-jangling shootout that saw the holders get their hands on the trophy – three years on from their famous victory over Germany at Wembley. Sarina Wiegman's side looked have got off to a dream start in the shootout as Beth Mead sent Spain goalkeeper Cata Coll the wrong way from 12 yards, despite slipping in her run-up. However, replays clearly showed that Mead had touched the ball twice before finding the back of the net, meaning she had to try to regather her composure to retake her penalty – which was subsequently saved. Mead could have been forgiven for watching the rest of the shootout through her fingers following her miss and the Arsenal forward would have had her mouth as Leah Williamson's tame effort was denied by Coll, with England holding a 2-1 lead. But Salma Paralluelo dragged her strike wide to ensure the trophy would remain with England, as long as Kelly was successful with her strike. Just last month, the law was changed on 'double-touch' penalties after Atletico Madrid's Julian Alvarez highly contentious disallowed spot-kick in the side's Champions League last-16 defeat to Real Madrid. More Trending Alvarez slipped and made contact with his standing leg before Real Madrid went on to prevail to book their spot in the quarter-finals. Issuing a clarification to Law 14 in response, the International Football Association Board (IFAB) confirmed that penalties which had been touched twice would now be allowed to be retaken in cases where it was 'clearly unintentional' – but only if the kick was successful. More to follow. MORE: Ian Wright slams Sarina Wiegman for 'massive mistake' in Women's Euros final MORE: Inside England captain Leah Williamson's relationship with former Miss USA winner MORE: How much do women footballers get paid? England player salaries revealed


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Lennon Miller to Bologna transfer domino that has yet to fall as Celtic told 'truth' about hijack attempt
The Motherwell midfielder is attracting interest from across Europe this summer Bologna are reportedly holding off on a formal bid for Motherwell prospect Lennon Miller as they look to sell on their key stars. The Serie A side and their rivals Udinese are both keen on the £5million-rated teenager - who did not feature in any of the Steelmen's Premier Sports Cup group stage games. Fir Park boss Jens Berthel Askou has admitted he could hand the 18-year-old a first appearance of the season in the Premiership opener against Rangers next Saturday if he remains at the club. And that looks increasingly likely with Gazzetta dello Sport report that Bologna want to offload Dan Ndoye before splurging more cash in the summer market. Napoli and Nottingham Forest are reportedly battling it out for a £43million deal - with the Italian side now pressing pause on an incoming stars as they await a cash injection. That leaves the door open other clubs to snap up the Scotland internatioanal with Udinese and Como among the interested parties - while Celtic boss Brendan Rodgers is understood to be a fan of Miller. And despite his dad Lee stating that Miller Jr is keen on a move away from the Scottish Premiership, the Hoops have been urged to push for a deal before it's too late. Former Parkhead defender Charlie Mulgrew reckons the Scottish champions could land the wonderkid for a low fee, telling Go Radio: "I'd love to see Celtic sign Lennon Miller. "I think that'd be a brilliant bit of business. Play him in one of those number eight roles, ease him into the season, and there's no doubt, he'd be one of Celtic's top performers this year if they get him in. 'Imagine him in that position, getting loads of the ball, using that wand of a right foot to dictate games. It'd be class to watch. 'And truth be told, it wouldn't even be that expensive to get him out of Motherwell, especially with them needing to sell.' You can get all the news you need on our dedicated Rangers and Celtic pages, and sign up to our newsletters to make sure you never miss a beat throughout the season. We're also on WhatsApp where we bring all the latest breaking news and transfer gossip directly to you phone. Join our Rangers community here and our Celtic community here.


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Premiership clubs' foreign signings and Gilmour, Ferguson and Hickey going abroad are worrying signs says Bill Leckie
Our man questions what makes domestic managers look overseas for their stars instead of into their academies HOME DISCOMFORTS Premiership clubs' foreign signings and Gilmour, Ferguson and Hickey going abroad are worrying signs says Bill Leckie THERE are no airs and graces about them. They have hunger and ambition. Advertisement 3 Jim Goodwin fielded a Dundee United team without a single Scottish starter on Thursday Credit: PA 3 Billy Gilmour moved to England then to Italy to get his chance in senior football Credit: Reuters 3 Lewis Ferguson started out at Aberdeen but moved to Bologna instead of staying in Scotland Credit: Getty They appreciate the chance they've been given. Jim Goodwin's explanation of why he put his European hopes in the hands of a busload of foreigners should make every young Scottish footballer sit up and take notice. Advertisement But in the wake of a night when he fielded the first team in Dundee United's competitive history without a homegrown starter, there was another line that should also have cut every chairman, manager and coach in the land to the quick. The one where he admitted his imports 'aren't used to being pampered by academies'. Wow. What an indictment of a system that was supposed to feed our national sport for generations to come, but which is instead providing us with little more than scraps. If that sounds harsh, then check these numbers from games involving our top 12 teams over the past few days. Rangers started two Scots — John Souttar and Findlay Curtis — against Panathinaikos in the Champions League on Tuesday. Advertisement Celtic went with four against Ajax the following evening in Tony Ralston, Dale Murray, Kieran Tierney and Callum McGregor, but of those, only the last two will be first picks once the real stuff starts. Hibs fielded four in the Europa League on Thursday night, Aberdeen had two against Ipswich on Friday. Hearts had six starting Scots against Sunderland on Saturday, while Killie had seven against East Fife and Livi six against Kelty Hearts. Huge thunderstorms at Ajax vs Celtic St Mirren and Dundee played three each against Ayr and Montrose, and Motherwell used just the two in Friday's friendly against Hertha Berlin. Of our entire top flight, only newly-promoted Falkirk kept the flag properly flying, playing ten Scots against Spartans on Saturday along with Brad Spencer, born in London to a Glaswegian dad. Advertisement That means of 132 players lining up at kick-off, only 50 qualify for that national team we're meant to be supplying. So we can grumble about the route Goodwin and United have gone down, as we've heard so many do since that Conference League tie last Thursday. Or maybe we can look at the key reasons why it's getting tougher and tougher for homegrown talent to make it on their own doorstep. Reasons which, while hard to hear and harder still to swallow, the Tannadice gaffer appears to have hit squarely on the head with his reasoning behind his signing policy. One which has taken him to the Netherlands, Croatia, Finland, Macedonia, Sweden and Australia rather than Netherlee, Cupar, Falkirk, Montrose, Sauchie and Auchterarder. Advertisement Because, for me at least, in bigging up the positive traits of a job-lot who fly in the face of everything the legendary Jim McLean put in place during the club's heyday, Goodwin is also giving our academies and the sort of players they produce their character. What he seems to be saying is that our youngsters DO have airs and graces about them, that they DON'T display the same hunger and ambition, that maybe they aren't as appreciative of the chance they've been given. Most damning of all, though? Have YOU got a point for Kris Boyd? Kris Boyd and Roger Hannah chew over the big talking points each week SOMETHING you've just got to get off your chest from the weekend action? A burning Scottish football talking point you can't wait to bring up with Kris Boyd and Roger Hannah? SunSport's GoBallistic show wants to hear from you! So why not help set the Scottish football agenda for the week ahead! Have your say on the game's big topics by emailing us on: GoBallistic@ It's YOUR turn to Go Ballistic! That they've got used to a set-up that pampers them. I wouldn't imagine for a moment he's claiming our academies aren't fit for purpose. Advertisement I also wouldn't dare suggest that he doesn't believe there are any good Scottish kids coming through. But it seems crystal clear that he doesn't believe they're producing the right kind of talent, physically or mentally, for our domestic game. Ask yourself how many are playing regularly for your team. Then ask yourself why so many, from Billy Gilmour to Lewis Ferguson to Aaron Hickey and more besides, have decided the only way to achieve their potential is go abroad and pretty much learn the game from scratch. Of course, Scottish teams playing without any Scottish players is nothing new. Advertisement It was March 2000 when Rangers did it for the first time, starting a 0-0 draw against St Johnstone with an Overseas XI. Stefan Klos, Lorenzo Amoruso, Arthur Numan, Andrei Kanchelskis, Gio van Bronckhorst, Rod Wallace, Jorg Albertz, Claudio Reyna, Tony Vidmar, Seb Rozental and Tugay. Difference was, you could see that coming from a mile off. Rangers fans unfurl giant tifo ahead of Russell Martin's first match It had seemed a natural next step ever since Graeme Souness arrived and more especially once Dick Advocaat took charge. But to see a once self-sufficient club like United go full-on foreign for such a big game? Well, that should pull us all up a bit sharp. Advertisement As, for that matter, should the shrinking number of Scots playing on a regular basis the higher we go up the food chain. If it works as well for Jim Goodwin as it has for, say Stephen Robinson at St Mirren, where he's identified a certain mix of power, pace and stature from England, Ireland and now Jamaica that he doesn't believe is available up here, then good luck to both of them, because their only job is to win games. If seeing Scottish players fritter into the minority pretty much right across the Premiership doesn't worry anyone and everyone who's invested in our game, though? Well, don't say you weren't warned when we run out for a World Cup qualifier one day with 11 guys who all qualified through their grannies. Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page