The Rangers board and supporters have been warned they have got one last chance to save the club from oblivion.
Andy Kerr, president of the Rangers Supporters’ Assembly, fears the club will not survive another financial catastrophe following their liquidation crisis last summer.
But the fans’ chief has warned the rest of the club’s faithful a boycott is not the way to put pressure on the unpopular ruling regime following their re-election at Thursday’s annual meeting, fearing it could drive the Ibrox outfit who lost £14.4 million in the 13 months up to June closer to a second administration disaster.
The Sons of Struth group, led by Craig Houston, want supporters to delay buying season tickets in a bid to force out the likes of unpopular finance director Brian Stockbridge.
But Kerr told Press Association Sport: “We as supporters need to keep supporting the club. Can the club survive another process where we have to start again? I’m not sure because a lot of fans are already fed up.
“I know some people think the only way to get results is for a boycott. But if we have to go back to the bottom, maybe go into administration again, it will be hard to pick people up again.
“This is the last chance the board and the fans have to get this right. The board are in a precarious position. The fans are in a fragile position.”
While Stockbridge was fiercely heckled by furious shareholders every time he opened his mouth during the meeting, chief executive Graham Wallace appeared to win over his doubters with a strong display from the top table.