He has lost the ****in plot
Check the date folks. I ain't spoofin' y'all this time.
The players dream of a free punch at me but I was right.. this is the worst Gers team EVER
Exclusive
By GRAEME DONOHOE
Published: 23 minutes ago
0
CHARLES GREEN reckons that his Rangers players want to PUNCH him â and he couldnât care less.
In the midst of a bombshell week at Ibrox as he admitted shafting disgraced former owner Craig Whyte to gain control of the fallen Glasgow giants Green opened his heart to The Scottish Sun.
He knows his outburst slating Ally McCoistâs side has made him unpopular in the dressing room but thereâs not a shred of regret on that score.
The Gers chief executive stressed: âA few weeks ago I made a statement that a few people were aghast about when I said that itâs the worst Rangers team thereâs ever been.
âI saw pundits on TV saying âThe Chief Exec shouldnât say thatâ. Why shouldnât you say it? Is it true? If itâs true, say it.
âIf I felt that I could forecast so well, Iâd start buying lottery tickets because the next dayâs result against Annan PROVED it.
âThe players? I suspect there is an element of âcan I kick himâ or âcan I punch himâ.
âI suppose if we had a game of five a side thereâd be a few of them would give me some heavy tackles.
âI think Iâd need to find some of my old speed to get away from them.
âLook, I donât think the manager was happy about it. I donât think the players were happy about it.
âBut I actually donât say things to make people happy and I donât say things to make people sad.
âI say âem because itâs factually correct and I say it because I believe it.â
Green is bidding to adapt to life in a bitterly divided city where he is left bemused by the role religion still plays in our football.
The Gers supremo holds no truck with any of it, though, and he confessed he would ponder hiring ex-Celt and self-confessed fascist Paolo Di Canio just as Sunderland have.
Di Canio received a one-match ban in Italy in 2005 for giving his fans at Lazio a Nazi salute and had previously described himself as âa fascist, but not a racistâ.
Green does not see what all the fuss is about.
He said: âI donât know the facts about Paolo Di Canioâs fascist comments but what have your political beliefs got to do with how you do your job?
âIf Iâm hiring, I donât care what religion they are, I donât care what colour they are, I donât care what their political beliefs are, or their social etiquette.
âWhat I think is wrong is to force someone to accept your view so I encourage with my children their right to express their view.
âEven to the extent of recent press speculation that we were going to sign Jon Daly and people are suggesting it may be a challenge because heâs a Catholic from Southern Ireland.
âWell, thatâs not a challenge at all. Listen, Iâm quite happy to go on record and say that the only challenge that there is ever going to be is on what wages someone wants and how Iâm going to pay them.
âCan they do the job and are they going to respect the badge thatâs on the shirt? Thatâs all the matters for me.â
Green insists he hates the growing political correctness that is creeping into society and revealed he still refers to Rangers business partner Imran Ahmad as âmy Paki friendâ.
Prince Harry famously found himself caught up in a storm when tapes emerged of him referring to an Asian soldier as âour little Paki friendâ.
Green sighed: âThe sectarian element of the Old Firm has been a hard thing to get used to.
âThat is something that Iâve found truly amazing and hugely surprising to find this divide in Scotland. It is a completely new concept to me.
âI was brought up in a mining community where whether someone was black, white, Catholic, Salvation Army, Protestant, made no difference.
âWhen I played at Worksop Town, the other striker was âDarkieâ Johnson. Now if I say that today I could go to jail.
âYou know, Imran will come into the office regularly and Iâll say âHowâs my Paki friend?â.
âOf course, you have all the do-gooders and puritanical people now saying you canât say that. Prince Harry got into so much trouble for that.â
Green is lurching from one controversy to the next right now but insists the good Gers have done on their travels in Scottish footballâs basement keeps him going.
He stressed: âGoing to places like Annan and Elgin, the whole town has been welcoming â not just the football clubs. The shopkeepers, the pastie shop owners, the bar guys.
âThe local economies are booming thanks to Rangers.
âSo itâs not just the clubs are getting capacity attendances and breaking new club records at every ground.
âIâve had chairmen come to me and say: âMr Green, my local pub came and gave the club a cheque for £1,000 because when Rangers turned up he had record takings. More than on Christmas Eveâ.
âWhat weâve got is a real legacy now that we can be proud of that shows how this giant of a club, that had been humbled so publicly, has stood proud, walked with its head held high and earned a lot of respect.
âLook, I wasnât a Rangers fan when I came â but I am becoming one very quickly.
âThis club becomes a part of you and you become a part of it. Thatâs been something that I never expected would happen.â
Quite sure two comments there are in breach of the RRA.



