Jump to content

 

 

Transfer thread - OFFICIAL!! David Templeton signs 4 year deal


Recommended Posts

Sorry but the boy's a fool to turn down a massive wage increase and the chance to play for Rangers. For what? The chance to maybe get into the Aussie team and spend your time pissing around Oceania? Don't see the appeal myself. Blue goggles or common sense?

 

he will know he can get a higher league and wage while retaining his national place.

Link to post
Share on other sites

David Templeton@dtempleton89

People slaughtering my gf! It's embarrassing! She has nothing to do with what's happened!

 

some sad people around

 

It's sad that some people have nothing better to do with their time than tweeting, Facebooking or whatever someone and/or their family.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Some just can't handle it.

 

Tom English ‏@TomEnglishSport

If it happens, it's a fantastic signing for Rangers but a shocking move for Templeton. He should have his eyes on England not Elgin

 

You can just tell he's getting his bitter poison pen warmed up for starting writing some bile after midnight.

 

Pretty much as anticipated. Check it out:-

 

Tom English: Templeton move is a sad state of affairs

 

By TOM ENGLISH

Published on Sunday 2 September 2012 01:19

 

THE jury is out on whether Ally McCoist is a good football manager or not, but, in the business of crisis management, he has shown an aptitude that would have had his mentor, Walter Smith, tipping the cap in admiration.

 

Last weekend, Rangers performed horrendously at Berwick, hanging on for grim death for a point that they scarcely deserved, Berwick having had a perfectly legitimate goal disallowed in the closing minutes. It was the third such struggle on the road following on from their travails at Brechin and Peterhead, three away games and three major disappointments.

 

At Berwick it was humiliation for the club, an abomination to those diehards who still believe â?? or at least pretend to believe â?? that they are one of the worldâ??s biggest operations. McCoist cut loose in the aftermath, successfully switching the news agenda from a heavy criticism of his own capabilities to a lambasting of his own players. The media reaction was that here was a strong manager who was about to annihilate his players, a leader who had had enough. In short, he got away with it.

 

Some Rangers fans bought the Ally Gets Mean message and others didnâ??t. When McCoist outlined his desperate need to bring new players to the club it would have been understandable had the Ibrox fans reacted by saying: â??How about properly coaching the ones you have first?â? Of course it is early days at the new Rangers and only a madman would suggest that they will not win the Third Division title with plenty to spare, but these early away games have been an awakening. In the parlance of the street, youâ??d have to say that in their visits to the homes of their new-found rivals, Rangers didnâ??t like it up â??em.

 

McCoist hasnâ??t got the bodies he was looking for. Instead of the five or six he said he needed just last weekend he only has a couple. Chief executive Charles Green might want to explain why the transfer business has been so modest given that the club, he tells us, is swimming in cash at the moment. He had his chance to prove it in the transfer market and he didnâ??t do it.

 

The high-profile capture is, of course, David Templeton, formerly of Hearts and most recently seen holding his own at Anfield against a Liverpool team containing Steven Gerrard, Luis Suarez and Joe Allen. Templeton looked very much at home in such company, unfazed and up for the challenge. The fact that he is now a Rangers player represents an excellent move by McCoist, far more convincing than some of the foreign journeymen he has brought to the club. Templeton is a player of much potential. In the world theyâ??re living in right now â?? and ludicrous though it may sound â?? you might even call his signing a coup.

 

Itâ??s a grim saga, though. Templeton was going to be out of contract at Hearts next summer and didnâ??t appear ready to sign a new deal at Tynecastle. At 23, and with a burgeoning reputation, he might have fancied his chances of progressing his career in England, but nobody came for him. Thatâ??s a surprise in itself, particularly having played so well against Liverpool in both matches and especially because he wouldnâ??t cost a whole lot. Templeton has been bashed, understandably, for his lack of ambition in plummeting down the divisions â?? from whence he came in the first instance with his move from Stenhousemuir to Hearts â?? but we have to factor in the possibility that seeing out the season at Tynecastle may not have been an option for him even if he wanted it to be.

 

In the past, Vladimir Romanov hasnâ??t looked kindly on players who have refused a move from Hearts, thereby denying him money from transfer fees. Once Rangers made their offer, in the region of £800,000, it would have been fascinating to hear Romanovâ??s reaction to it and the words of advice he may have imparted to Templeton. â??We need the money. Move now or rot in the reservesâ?. Perhaps. The first reaction to the move was to criticise Templeton for placing a greater value on salary than career development, but credence must be given to the notion that he was left with little option. With only one suitor and a Hearts owner maybe keen to cash in before it was too late, he may have had nowhere else to go but down.

 

Sure, Templeton will be buoyed by games at Ibrox and every second week in Glasgow heâ??ll be performing in front of crowds that he couldnâ??t dream about at Tynecastle and heâ??ll be getting paid more and will have more stability in his professional life. But itâ??s still the Third Division. Itâ??s no place for a young player who has already shown himself capable of competing at a high level. If Rangers are made to work their way through the divisions to get back to the SPL, it will be 2015 at the earliest by the time they do it. Templeton will be 26 going on 27 by then. His bank balance will be healthy, but you have to wonder what his game will be like. Is it possible to play lower league football for three straight seasons and still maintain the standards he showed against Liverpool?

 

Rangers have signed an exciting player, of that there is no doubt. Good luck to them. Thatâ??s what they need to do. Thatâ??s why they exist, to try and better themselves. But the same goes for Templeton. His real reasons for joining Rangers remain unclear.

 

Maybe the idea of being a Rangers man turns him on, regardless of where theyâ??re playing. But, whatever has happened behind the scenes, the likelihood is that Templeton has reduced his prospects of playing European football for the next four years (unless thereâ??s a Scottish Cup victory). He has also virtually obliterated any chance of a Scotland cap and has, youâ??d have to think, taken himself out of the shop window for attractive clubs down in England for, regardless of how he does against the Elgins and the Annans and the East Stirlingshires, theyâ??re still Elgin and Annan and East Stirlingshire.

 

His arrival is excellent news for Rangers. But in the greater scheme of things? In a word, sad.

 

http://www.scotsman.com/scotland-on-sunday/sport/tom-english-templeton-move-is-a-sad-state-of-affairs-1-2502040

Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.