DOUGLAS PARK has called for a Scottish FA investigation into the cinch sponsorship saga and accused the SPFL of bullying and bringing the game into disrepute.
The Rangers chairman has spoken out after the SPFL confirmed on Wednesday evening that it had entered into a new sponsorship arrangement with cinch to bring an end to the long-running and costly row between the Hampden hierarchy and Ibrox board.
Rangers refused to display cinch logos on their shirts or use branding for the used car sales firm after expressing concerns over the £8million deal that was signed last summer.
Chairman Park - who owns Park's of Hamilton, the firm who have had a long-standing relationship with Rangers - was involved in his own legal challenge after the SPFL sought an SFA arbitration case against the then Premiership champions earlier this season.
A spokesperson for Park's of Hamilton Ltd said: “We were not surprised to learn from the media announcement last night that the SPFL have finally acknowledged Rangers legitimately engaged rule i7 in June of last year and thus, vindicated the stance held by the club for over a year. It is not for us to speculate as to why the SPFL leadership sought to ignore their own rules for so long.
“The fact that the SPFL prevaricated and continued to stall an arbitration process they themselves initiated in August last year, and which was ruled upon by the court of appeal in October, underlined the weakness of the case they truly had. Were it not for our interim interdict, it is clear their strategy was to try and bully one of their members and shareholders; a strategy which they have employed on numerous occasions.
“Throughout the last year, Park’s have kept their counsel as the SPFL leadership insulted us and misled the SFA, their member clubs, their title sponsor, and various other stakeholders in Scottish football.
“We have a long-standing and proud association with Scottish football, and it was entirely wrong that we were compelled to take the SFA to court because the SPFL decided to abuse the SFA’s arbitration process. We believe that the SPFL and members of its leadership have brought the game into disrepute and have failed, as have the SPFL as an organisation, to act with the utmost good faith towards their members.
“The SFA must carry out an independent investigation into this issue which has cost all parties involved hundreds of thousands of pounds. Despite being awarded expenses in court, Park’s will not recover all their legal fees nor be compensated for the reputational damage caused by the SPFL.
“Finally, the glaring omission from the SPFL’s statement was an apology. The SPFL leadership owe their members an apology, they owe Park's an apology, they owe the SFA an apology and they also owe an apology to Rangers. Unfortunately, they seem to lack any accountability and would rather spend their members money than admit their failures.”