Acquiring Rangers Murray's involvement in football has overshadowed his business and personal lives and explains much of his prominence within
Scottish society. In the 1980s Murray made a bid for
Ayr United which was rejected by shareholders of the club. Attracted by the idea of owning one of Scotland's highest-profile football clubs, on 23 November 1988 Murray secured the purchase of Rangers from the club's then owner, the
Nevada-based Lawrence Marlborough, for a sum of £6,000,000.
Chairmanship Throughout what was later to transpire as his first period of chairmanship, Murray continued and extended the ambitious strategy he had inherited from
David Holmes. His investment saw further development to
Ibrox Stadium, which had already undergone extensive remodelling in the aftermath of the
Ibrox disaster of 2 January 1971, which claimed the lives of 66 fans following an
Old Firm derby with
Celtic. Murray oversaw the construction of a third tier on the existing Main Stand, raising the ground's capacity by 7,300. This period was to be significant for more reasons than footballing success. In 1989 Murray and the then manager
Graeme Souness signed
Mo Johnston, the first high-profile
Catholic to play for the club since the
Second World War, from
French club
Nantes for £1.5 million. Other high-profile players were to follow in later years, including
Paul Gascoigne,
Brian Laudrup,
Ronald de Boer and
Tore André Flo.
Period of success Following Graeme Souness' departure to
Liverpool in April 1991, Murray appointed his former assistant
Walter Smith as manager. Under Smith, and his eventual replacement in 1998 by
Dick Advocaat, Rangers embarked upon a sustained period of success that saw the club win eleven league championships over fourteen years. the club's record in Europe from 1989 was one of under-performance upon the expectation. In
2005–06 Rangers secured qualification from the group stage of the Champions League, becoming the first Scottish side to reach the last-sixteen knockout stage of the competition in its current format. In
2007–08, Rangers reached the final of the
UEFA Cup but lost 2–0 to
FC Zenit at the
City of Manchester Stadium. Rangers went on, however, to win a Cup Double, of the
Scottish League Cup, and the
Scottish Cup. In
2001–02, Murray abandoned his previous insistence that Rangers would never leave Scottish football, arguing in support of a move by the Old Firm to the better-resourced English leagues, and ultimately the
Premier League. This, Murray and others argued, would provide substantially increased income from growing television revenues, and with it the potential for the club to operate in a more competitive environment which could help boost performance in European competitions. Due to allegations of Rangers running an undeclared payment system outside of player contracts and therefore improperly registering players with the football authorities, the possibility arose of titles won by Rangers during Murray's reign being revoked. Murray strongly denied claims of any wrongdoing during his stewardship. In 2013 a
Scottish Premier League independent commission took place into alleged "undisclosed payments" by Rangers. It found that Rangers had deliberately failed to disclose the trust payments in order to withhold information from
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) and fined the old company £250,000. It had been anticipated that the investigation would revoke honours won by Rangers during the period that the trust payments were made (five League titles, four Scottish Cups and five League Cups), but this was not done because it was considered that Rangers had not obtained any sporting advantage by withholding information.
Finances In a quest to fulfil Murray's ambitions for Rangers in Europe, a period of unprecedented spending under the managership of
Dick Advocaat saw the club's debts increase. As anticipated television revenues failed to materialise and the club's income failed to offset the growing cost of transfer fees and player salaries. In 1998 Murray said, "For every five pounds Celtic spend, we will spend ten." By 2001, with the appointment of
Alex McLeish as manager, Murray acknowledged that mistakes were made, saying "we got it wrong. We obviously spent far too much money. We can't let it happen again because that would be total mismanagement." A radical programme of cost-cutting was instituted in an attempt to re-establish the club on a stable financial footing. In 1996,
ENIC Group invested
£40 million in Rangers. However, disagreements with Murray over transfer spending led to ENIC's Howard Stanton resigning from the club's board of directors in May 1999. ENIC announced plans to sell their 20.2% stake in Rangers in February 2001, but after failing to find a buyer they sold to Murray for £8.9 million in August 2004. In April 2010 the bank increased its stake in Murray International Holdings to 24%, arranging a debt-for-equity swap after the firm suffered further huge losses. On 5 July 2002, Murray had relinquished the chairmanship and limited his day-to-day involvement in the club's running. His status as by far the club's biggest share-holder remained. On 1 September 2004, Murray announced his return to the chairmanship, and with it a rights-issue to raise £50 million with which to reduce the club's debt. In doing so, Murray also saw his shareholding in the club increase to around 90% of the total stock. Murray has claimed that he invested £100 million of his own money into Rangers while owner. Since selling Rangers, the financial management during David Murray's reign at Rangers has come under even more criticism due to the club's entry into liquidation in February 2012. Murray sold Rangers to Craig Whyte who has maintained a stance of blaming the previous regime led by Murray for the club's problems, particularly in relation to a potential heavy tax bill brought about by the use of
employee benefit trusts (EBTs). Murray, however, has played down his role in the club's financial meltdown and also denied allegations of "cheating", in relation to Rangers' use of EBTs, taking place during his time as owner. The
First-tier Tax Tribunal to decide Rangers' and Murray International Holdings' appeal against a £74 million tax bill claimed by
HMRC due to the use of EBTs announced a verdict on 20 November 2012, with Rangers and MIH winning the appeal on a majority verdict. After the verdict, Murray expressed dismay at the damage caused to Rangers by the case before it had reached a decision, while also confirming a settlement of over £10 million had been offered to HMRC two years previously. He also questioned HMRC's handling of his successor Craig Whyte's actions, who had stopped paying tax and national insurance at the club which eventually led to the liquidation of Rangers' previous holding company. Legal action against the leaks by Murray was underway as of 2012.
Sale of Rangers By 2006, Murray was considering ending his involvement with Rangers. Murray himself continued to articulate a more ambiguous stance on his desire to sell or retain ownership of the club: "It's not a 'For Sale' sign per se, but obviously I don't want to do this forever." Murray announced on 26 August 2009 that he was again to step down as chairman of Rangers Football Club for personal reasons. In June 2010 Murray announced that the club was no longer actively seeking a buyer. At the time, the club and its parent company Murray International Holdings were subject to an investigation from HMRC into a tax issue, to do with payments made into
offshore bank accounts. On 6 May 2011 it was confirmed that Murray had sold his controlling interest in the club (85.3 percent) to Wavetower Limited for £1, subject to full repayment of the existing £18 million overdraft to the Bank of Scotland, provision of £5 million for investment in new playing staff per year for 4 years, and £7 million for additional working capital facilities and stadium improvements. Wavetower Limited is owned by the company Liberty Capital which in turn is ultimately owned by businessman
Craig Whyte. == Rugby sponsorship ==