RANGERS are playing catch-up rather than leading the way. They are the hunters rather than the prey in the Premiership. Pedro Caixinha welcomes the chase, though.

On the eve of the first Old Firm game of the campaign, the Portuguese put his own modern-day twist on the famous words of legendary Ibrox boss Bill Struth.

After a year of failure last season, the tolerance of supporters was put to the test. Now it is Caixinha’s job to ensure Rangers emerge stronger.

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The task is far from straightforward for the 46-year-old as he attempts to catch and then overhaul a side that swept all before them in Scotland last term.

In the big picture, a win at Ibrox tomorrow would only be small snapshot. It would be important nonetheless, for Rangers and the manager.

“I think we’re all aware we are here and five seasons ago the club was in League Two,” Caixinha said. “Today the club is back in action and in these five seasons the club is investing and have been increasing that investment in order to not [be] welcoming the chase as Bill Struth once said but welcoming the chasing we are doing to get the club in that direction.

“We know that. We know that having a lot of investment on the work we are doing, on the renewal of the squad, on the organisation that we want the team to have, on the performance that we want the team to have and, of course, in each game competing for the three-points.

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“So that’s the only thing we can do. Always thinking positively and always thinking that we can do the things to do our very best to win the game.”

Caixinha has recently celebrated his six month anniversary at Ibrox and victory over Brendan Rodgers’ side would be a belated, but undoubtedly welcome, present to mark the occasion.

Having arrived from Al-Gharafa as a virtual unknown in Glasgow, the Gers boss still has critics to silence and doubters to win over.

Whatever the future holds, Caixinha is relishing the present.

“I am the type of person where if I am not enjoying something or living it I cannot do it,” he said.

“I am all in or I am all out. I cannot live in the middle.

“So I can say that I am enjoying managing Rangers totally and I am definitely all in.

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“About the job, I am all in. It’s a fantastic job, a fantastic club, fantastic fans, a fantastic football team, fantastic players, fantastic staff, I am enjoying it. It is fun from 6am till 6pm every day.”

The lows have outweighed the highs so far for Caixinha and the same questions that were raised upon his appointment are still prevalent now for supporters.

The build-up to an Old Firm encounter can be emotionally draining but Caixinha is happy to immerse himself in his work as he strives for success.

“If you live it like all-in then, yes,” he said when asked if the time has passed quickly. “‘That’s another thing I have learned in the last six months.

“My wife sits here and she is not working. And because I am here and absorbed in this she will say that I am never with her.

“I try to find something for her to do in order that that the time will pass as well as mine. That’s the reality.

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“I want her to have something to do in her spare time when the kids are at school and I am working. She needs to have her mind occupied.

“When you have your mind occupied and focussed that’s the secret. When you select what to focus on and occupy your mind.”

Whether Caixinha is a success or a failure at Rangers, his commitment to the job and his attitude can’t be questioned.

The club has made an impression on the Portuguese. He has still to make his mark, though.

“My life in football is 24 hours, less the time I spend with my family,” he said. “The time I spend with my family I want to be quality time, so if I can give them two hours a day that is perfect.

“After the Hamilton game we have the international break and we have three days off so I will be delighted to enjoy it with them. It just needs to be all in on the right moment. 24 hours, minus the family.”

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The time that Caixinha hasn’t spent at home in the last couple of days will have been dominated by the upcoming 90 minutes at Ibrox.

The chances of Rangers emerging as champions this term will remain slim, even if revenge is gained for the 5-1 hammering on home soil last term.

But the points that could be earned are important for Rangers, and the goodwill that Caixinha would bank would be invaluable.

“It’s important because it is the next one,” he said. “It’s important because everyone loves these great matches, these big matches, Old Firm matches and that’s all.

“It’s one game that counts for three-points. We know if they get they three points the difference will be eight-points, if we draw everything stays like it is and if we win, which we are working in that direction, we move two-points from them.”