Rangers striker Kenny Miller insists the speculation surrounding his future is not affecting his game.

Miller is likely to be reunited with former club partner Kris Boyd tomorrow night when Scotland host Liechtenstein in a must-win Euro 2012 qualifier at Hampden.

His current situation at Ibrox mirrors the one Boyd found himself in. Last year, the now Middlesbrough striker could not agree a new deal at the Light Blues and ran down his final year before leaving.

Likewise this time around, Miller has rejected an extension and appears in no hurry to get back around the table.

But he says his focus will not be affected amidst claims of interest from Middle East clubs who have until September 15 to sign players.

“It doesn’t bother me,” Miller said, “I just get my head down and play. There was a contract for me on the table and I rejected it and that’s where we stand.

“If I’m playing well then hopefully everything will get ironed out. These things come up when a player enters his last year and you just accept it.”

Miller has made a great start to the new SPL campaign, with five goals to his name, and manager Walter Smith revealed last month that a second offer had been made to keep the player at Ibrox.

After losing Boyd under freedom of contract, James Beattie, Vladimir Weiss and Nikica Jelavic have been brought in to bolster Smith’s attacking options.

“We had it with big Boydy last year,” added Miller, “whether he was going to sign or whether he was going to go.

“I’ve not said anything. I’m just enjoying my football and looking forward to scoring more goals.

“We’ve lost a lot of goals with Boydy gone and I’ve got off to a decent start, getting five in the first three games.

“If I can score as many as Boydy did over the last four years, I’ll be really happy. But as long as I’m contributing towards the team, I’m happy.”

Miller hopes that he can slot back into the groove with Boyd if they do get the nod from boss Craig Levein against the Group I minnows tomorrow.

“When you form a partnership, people have roles and me and Boydy had a good understanding,” Miller explained. “It worked for us, it worked for the team.”

He added: “With him away from Rangers, I’ve found myself in positions for the tap-ins that maybe Boydy would have had and I’ve been fortunate enough to put them away.

“We’ll need to wait and see what happens tomorrow, but he is a player I enjoying being up there with.”

Miller, who played as a lone frontman in the 0-0 draw with Lithuania, backed Levein’s tactics and claimed only a better final ball was missing from one of the most dominant away performances he can remember.

“I felt we took the game to Lithuania,” he added. “We played with one up front but you saw in the first half how high we pressed the ball.

“I thought we played well. For long spells, we dominated. That final pass, if it had just been that bit better, it might have given us more opportunities and that’s maybe what we need to sharpen up on tomorrow.”