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Rangers vs Aberdeen Viaplay Cup final preview: Who will end their long wait for League Cup glory?

Philippe Clement's Rangers take on Barry Robson's Aberdeen at Hampden Park on Sunday; the Dons won at Ibrox in the Scottish Premiership in September while the teams drew at Pittodrie last month; follow updates on Sky Sports News and our dedicated live blog

Something has to give on Sunday when Rangers meet Aberdeen at Hampden Park once again in the League Cup final.

It is a competition - often associated with these two sides to varying degrees - that has eluded both for so long, meaning this weekend's final offers up the chance for long-awaited redemption or ongoing exasperation.

Rangers may have scratched their recent silverware itch with a title and Scottish Cup triumph over the past few seasons but many supporters almost view this as their trophy. It is the one domestic title that is still missing from the books since the club's promotion back to the top flight.

Rangers lost to Celtic in the League Cup final at Hampden
Image: Rangers lost to Celtic in last season's Viaplay Cup final at Hampden

They have won the competition a record 27 times but it has now been over a decade since the trophy went to Ibrox. Steven Gerrard and then Michael Beale came close to remedying that in recent years but both fell short in finals to Celtic.

The Dons have also been beaten finalists twice since they last won the competition in 2014, when victory over Inverness Caledonian Thistle ensured their first piece of silverware in 19 years.

Aberdeen last reached the League Cup final in 2018 where they lost to Celtic
Image: Aberdeen last reached the League Cup final in 2018 where they lost to Celtic

Rangers versus Aberdeen under the Hampden Park lights has provided some of the most memorable occasions in Scottish football in years gone by and, given the controversy that has already marked their league fixtures this season, we can expect more drama in Glasgow on Sunday.

The season so far

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Highlights from the first Scottish Premiership match between the clubs this season

Aberdeen go into the final in a somewhat unpredictable vein of form. They currently sit ninth in the Scottish Premiership but have taken four points off Rangers so far this season, which included a 3-1 win at Ibrox in September that ultimately cost Beale his job.

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Since then, however, Robson's side have only won twice in the league and have been knocked out of the Europa Conference League, despite ending their European campaign with an impressive 2-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt on Thursday. Indeed, without those four points earned against Rangers, his side would be 11th in the league, in the relegation play-off spot.

Rangers, meanwhile, enjoyed a solid start under new manager Philippe Clement after Beale's departure, with the team 13 games unbeaten under the Belgian going into the showpiece event at the national stadium. Progress has been obvious, and they are now just five points behind Celtic - with a game in hand - ahead of their New Year visit to Parkhead, with a stunning 3-2 win over Real Betis in Spain in midweek also securing a spot in the last 16 of the Europa League.

Ahead of the return game at Pittodrie last month, however, former Gers striker and Sky Sports pundit Kris Boyd had added spice to the game by saying Aberdeen players, who lost 6-0 to Celtic in their previous outing, would raise their game against Rangers.

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Highlights from the most recent league meeting between Aberdeen and Rangers

Bojan Miovski's 11th-minute opener would have done little to change his mind before James Tavernier scored from the spot in the 94th minute after Stefan Gartenmann pulled Connor Goldson's shirt in the box at a corner.

Robson was furious with the decision, saying after the match: "It doesn't look great. For me it doesn't look good, another VAR decision going Rangers' way in the 90th minute again."

Those comments will have done little to ease the inevitable hostilities between the two teams.

Both go into the final desperate for silverware, with Rangers fans unhappy at Robson's remarks and Aberdeen having expressed their dissatisfaction at being denied a 50-50 ticket split for the game.

All of this, coupled with a rich history in this particular fixture, makes for an intriguing contest at the national stadium.

Do Robson's Aberdeen have upper hand over Gers?

Rangers last won the League Cup in 2011
Image: Rangers last won the League Cup in 2011

Rangers have been waiting for a long time to collect their 28th League Cup. They have not won this competition since Walter Smith guided his side to victory over Celtic in March 2011.

They let opportunities to banish that record slip through their hands with defeats to Celtic in 2019 and in February this year. Clement is determined not to see the Rangers fans walk away from this final empty-handed.

The Belgian, who could have Todd Cantwell and Scott Wright back in his squad, said: "Winning trophies brings appreciation from outside and it can change perceptions.

"I have read a lot of bad things about these players and this team and they can change all of that in one game."

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John Lundstram explains what a League Cup final win over Aberdeen would mean to Rangers.

Clement's own cup record as a player is an impressive one. He was a four-time winner of the Belgian Cup with Genk and Club Brugge so clearly knows how to win finals on the pitch. As a manager, however, he is still waiting for a first domestic cup win, excluding the Super Cup he won with Brugge in 2021.

Before that he lost the 2018 Belgian Cup final with Genk and the 2020 final with Club Brugge and will be determined to make amends this time around.

"There is always excitement if you can play finals and win trophies, it brings something extra," he added. "Of course we had an exciting evening on Thursday. I was very pleased about the team writing history, the first time Rangers won in Spain.

"It is an exceptional thing they did, but we need to turn our minds. In my past I have had good and bad experiences that way.

"After a historical evening, if you don't have the right mindset you can lose it really fast and in a really stupid way. I told the players we won with Brugge in the Champions League in Milan, against a really good Milan, and all the famous names - Cafu, Maldini, Dida, Nesta, Pirlo, Shevchenko, Inzaghi.

"We won 1-0, it was a great party afterwards. We were like kings of the world. And three days later we lost against the smallest team in Belgium. All the fuss and positivity was gone in a few days.

"So I spoke about that with the team and I saw in their eyes they had already switched. So they are ready for Sunday.

"The past is the past and we need to write a really good future and they can write history again. It's an amazing thing, they can write history twice in four days - they need to grab that opportunity with both hands."

Kilmarnock's Marley Watkins (right) celebrates with his team-mates after scoring against Celtic
Image: Kilmarnock ended Celtic's League Cup defence in August

Celtic's surprise defeat to Kilmarnock earlier in the tournament presented Rangers with a fantastic opportunity to lift a trophy they haven't managed to get their hands on in over a decade.

In years gone by this trophy was one Walter Smith's sides would prioritise to set them up for the season: "I remember Walter always saying we need to get to this final and win this trophy to send out an early marker," Stuart McCall previously told Sky Sports News.

Winning breeds winning - something this Rangers side have not been able to consistently do. Clement can pick up some early goodwill and buy-in from the Rangers support by doing what Beale failed to do last year and winning silverware early his reign.

His counterpart on Sunday is no stranger to League Cup success - and with Aberdeen.

Barry Robson won the League Cup with Aberdeen in 2014
Image: Barry Robson won the League Cup with Aberdeen in 2014

Robson was part of the last Dons side to win a trophy - the League Cup - under Derek McInnes in 2014 when he scored the first spot-kick in their 4-2 penalty shootout win over Inverness Caledonian Thistle. Incidentally, current Pittodrie skipper Graeme Shinnie was part of the losing side that day.

He was also part of the Celtic team that won the competition in 2008, although he was not in the squad that beat Rangers 2-0 in the final at Hampden.

It is his first major final as a manager after stepping up from his role as interim boss following the departure of Jim Goodwin last season.

Aberdeen lifted the League Cup in 1995
Image: Aberdeen lifted the League Cup in 1995

Before that triumph under McInnes, you have to go back to 1995 for the last time Aberdeen won a major trophy - again the League Cup. They came so close to adding to that silverware tally under the now-Kilmarnock manager during his time in the Granite City but could not quite get over the line.

Sunday offers a chance to make amends for that. Victory at Hampden could completely re-energise Aberdeen as a cup side and give impetus to what has been a stuttering league campaign thus far.

Despite their differing league positions, Aberdeen are unbeaten against Rangers this season and it could be argued they go into the final with the upper hand over their opponents. Robson refuses to put too much stock in league form, however, and knows anything can happen in the final.

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Aberdeen boss Barry Robson says his side are underdogs ahead of Sunday's Viaplay Cup final against Rangers

He said: "Everybody wants to win a trophy but you need to go and earn it.

"For me, it is something we really want to do. This club has a great tradition. If they perform well we've got the opportunity to lift a cup.

"We know it is going to be difficult, they're a proper Rangers team, we know we're underdogs - so let's just see if we can put a real performance on.

"Winning a cup is something that the club want to do. I just want to see the players and the fans and everyone at the club being happy and winning a cup."

Robson could also be boosted by the return of forward Bojan Miovski - who has scored 12 goals this season - as he battles to recover from a hamstring issue picked up in the win over Hearts.

"He was all right this morning [Friday]," said Robson. "Obviously we've still got another training session to go tomorrow [Saturday] so we'll see how he is tomorrow and we can go from there."

Hostilities renewed

Colin Jackson (3rd left) is congratulated after scoring the winner for Rangers in the 1979 League Cup final
Image: Colin Jackson (3rd left) is congratulated after scoring the winner for Rangers in the 1979 League Cup final

These two sides played out the first final of the League Cup in April 1947, with Rangers beating Aberdeen 4-0 in front of nearly 83,000 fans at Hampden.

They would not meet again in the final until 1979, with Rangers emerging victorious once more, condemning Aberdeen to the first of back-to-back final defeats.

Then came that golden era of the Rangers versus Aberdeen rivalry as it became one of the premier matches in the Scottish football calendar shortly after the arrival of Graeme Souness at Ibrox and the departure of Alex Ferguson from Pittodrie in 1986.

To those of a certain generation, this fixture was the League Cup final.

In the decade that followed Souness' arrival, Rangers and Aberdeen won eight out of the 10 finals in the League Cup, with the Ibrox side accounting for six of those. Indeed, it was Aberdeen who were Rangers' closest title challengers for the most part until the re-emergence of Celtic under Tommy Burns in the mid-1990s.

Between 1987 and 1992 Rangers and Aberdeen met in the League Cup final on four occasions, which included three finals in a row. All are Scottish football classics, with little to separate two very good teams.

Aberdeen 3-3 Rangers (Rangers win 5-3 on pens), Hampden Park, October 1987

Rangers beat Aberdeen after penalties in 1987
Image: Rangers beat Aberdeen after penalties in 1987

There was nothing to choose between the sides after 120 minutes of a pulsating game at Hampden which saw the lead and momentum swing back and forth between Rangers and Aberdeen. Jim Bett's penalty opened the scoring before a stunning Davie Cooper free-kick restored parity. Willie Falconer thought he had won the game for Aberdeen before Robert Fleck's late equaliser sent the game to extra-time and eventually penalties, with Rangers converting all five kicks to retain their trophy.

Aberdeen 2-3 Rangers, Hampden Park, October 1988

Ian Ferguson and Ally McCoist scored for Rangers in the 1988 final against Aberdeen
Image: Ian Ferguson and Ally McCoist scored for Rangers in the 1988 final against Aberdeen

The two sides met again at Hampden the following year and served up another classic, with Rangers again coming out on top. Goals from Ally McCoist and Ian Ferguson had Rangers in front twice with strikes from Davie Dodds pegging them back both times. McCoist was not to be denied, however, popping up with the winner four minutes from time.

Aberdeen 2-1 Rangers (AET), Hampden Park, October 1989

Rangers beat Aberdeen again in the 1989 final
Image: Aberdeen defeated Rangers in the 1989 final

Remarkably, the sides met in the League Cup final for the third time in a row in 1989, with Aberdeen finally halting Rangers' winning run in the competition. Paul Mason opened the scoring for the Dons before Mark Walters made it 1-1 from the penalty spot. The game again went to extra-time, with Mason slamming home the winner for Aberdeen in the 103rd minute.

Aberdeen would go on to win a cup double this season, beating Celtic on penalties in the Scottish Cup final the following May.

Aberdeen 1-2 Rangers (AET), Hampden Park, October 1992

Rangers captain Richard Gough lifts the League Cup in 1989
Image: Rangers captain Richard Gough lifts the League Cup in 1989

By the time the sides met again in the League Cup final in 1992 Graeme Souness had departed Rangers and Willie Miller had moved into the Aberdeen dugout. Again, the game went the distance as Stuart McCall's opener was cancelled out by Duncan Shearer, only for a Gary Smith own goal in the 114th minute to hand victory to Rangers.

Walter Smith's side went on to win a treble, beating Aberdeen again in the Scottish Cup final and finishing ahead of Miller's team in the league.

Team news

Rangers could be boosted by the return of Todd Cantwell who missed the Europa League win over Betis for personal reasons, while Leon King and ex-Aberdeen winger Scott Wright are also available.

Striker Danilo is out long-term after knee surgery, plus Cifuentes also misses out due to a ban and injury. Meanwhile, crocked pair Nico Raskin and Tom Lawrence are also out - with Ryan Jack's return date yet to be confirmed.

Aberdeen could be boosted with the return of Bojan Miovski who has scored 12 goals this season, with boss Robson 'optimistic' of the North Macedonia striker featuring at Hampden Park.

The Dons have no fresh injury worries after their superb win over Eintracht Frankfurt.

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