I fully back Danny Röhl and I’m backing every single player until the end of the season. That’s the simple truth. One bad performance and a poor result shouldn’t send us spiralling into the sort of bitterness and instant recrimination we’ve seen, or into calls for knee‑jerk changes.


Why I back Danny

To be fair, managers deserve time to put their ideas in. You can see why supporters get frustrated after a poor night — I feel it too — but there’s a difference between frustration and rewriting the last few months. Röhl is the manager we have right now. Backing him doesn’t mean being blind to errors; it means trusting a process rather than launching into a sack‑rail brigade after every setback.


The Ibrox noise and how it affects things

We’ve talked about atmosphere at Ibrox endlessly, and yes, crowd mood matters. When home support is negative it feeds into performance, and the same goes for the opposite. I’ve seen fans accuse everything from tactics to selection to nationality — that bitterness and lack of reason spreads fast. It’s exhausting. We’re better served by clear criticism that focuses on facts and football, not by childish chants and tribal bile aimed at whoever the scapegoat is that week.


Don’t rewrite history for a bad night

As soon as we lose we get the usual "bring Stevie G back" chant and the lazy narratives that he always picked the perfect team and tactics while somehow winning only one trophy in three years. That’s precisely the kind of selective memory that does the club no favours. If you want to debate tactics, line‑ups or mentality, do it with specifics. Don’t fall into the trap of replacing one set of slogans with another just because it suits an immediate mood.

At the end of the day I want the club to move forward, not lurch from one emotional reaction to the next. Back the manager, back the players, and let’s demand standards in a way that actually helps rather than just makes noise. If people are serious about improvements, they should be constructive — not just loud.

Written by Aphelion: 24 June 2026