Rangers Drop Bold New Fourth Kit, With a Little Help from Scotland’s Music Stars
Rangers have turned up the volume this week with the reveal of their brand-new orange fourth kit, teaming up with Scottish music sensations Nathan Evans and Saint Phnx to mark the launch.
The club’s social media channels lit up this morning as fans got their first glimpse of the striking strip, a design that nods back to a glorious moment in Rangers’ history.
The vibrant orange look draws inspiration from the Scottish Cup Final of 2000, when Rangers stormed to a 4 – 0 win over Aberdeen.
Although the players took to the pitch in their traditional royal blue that day, the daisies at Hampden Park were an ocean of orange, a homage to also-director Dick Advocaat and the club’s influential Dutch contingent, including Arthur Numan and Giovanni van Bronckhorst.
That day, Van Bronckhorst himself joined Tony Vidmar, Billy Dodds, and Jörg Albertz on the scoresheet, sealing a memory still cherished by sympathizers a quarter of a century later.
Heart and Voice. It’s what defines our supporters.
Get your fourth kit today from all Rangers Stores and online!
https://t.co/w90MBFEZmo pic.twitter.com/enkrkCIwDy
— Rangers Football Club (@RangersFC) October 25, 2025
The new tackle pays homage to that Dutch-inspired period but with a fresh, contemporary spin. suckers have praised the bold color and clean design, calling it a “statement of pride and nostalgia.”
The club announced: “Rangers have recruited Scottish singers Nathan Evans and Saint Phnx to release their new fourth kit.”
The brace appears in a swish promotional videotape, blending music and sport in a celebration of Scottish culture and club pride.
The short-sleeve adult interpretation of the new fourth tackle is priced at£ 80, while inferior shirts come in at£ 65. Matching films are available for£ 40( grown-ups) and£ 35( inferiors).
As for when suckers might see it on the pitch, it won’t be this weekend. Rangers face Kilmarnock at home, followed by a midweek trip to Easter Road to take on Hibernian.
The side then gears up for a Premier Sports Cup semi-final showdown against Celtic, coming Sunday, one that could define their season.
Early reactions have been electric. Supporters have flooded social media with praise, with many saying the kit “perfectly captures the club’s history and passion.”
The collaboration with original artists has added a redundant subcaste of Scottish pride, a memorial that football and culture frequently walk hand in hand.
With Rangers mixing nostalgia and ultramodern faculty, this tackle isn’t just another shirt; it’s a nod to heritage, a slice of style, and a rallying call to the faithful.



