ABERDEEN FANS UNLEASH SAVAGE, VENOMOUS CHANTS ON RANGERS STAR IN A NIGHT OF PURE HATRED
Some grounds are polite. Others are hostile. Pittodrie is neither. It is unforgiving, brutal, and unapologetic — a place where sentiment dies quickly and loyalty is demanded, not negotiated. This is a stadium where memories are weaponised, where silence is weakness, and where betrayal is never forgiven. Those who misunderstand that truth inevitably learn it the hard way.
Aberdeen is a club built on spine, defiance, and an old-school sense of honour that refuses to be diluted. Here, values matter more than careers, and identity outweighs ambition. When someone crosses the line, Pittodrie does not offer sympathy or understanding. It offers judgment — loud, ruthless, and relentless.
Sunday night was judgment day.
From the moment Bojan Miovski dared to return wearing Rangers colours, Aberdeen supporters made it clear they had not come to watch quietly. They came to punish. What followed was a vicious, coordinated barrage of abuse that turned Pittodrie into a cauldron of fury and instantly exploded across social media.
Before kick-off, the Red Army fired the first shot. A massive banner was unveiled, dripping with contempt, quoting club legend Eoin Jess: “I’d never come back to Pittodrie in a Rangers shirt, I have my morals.” It was a public execution in fabric form — a direct message that Miovski had sold his soul.
Then came the chants. Not recycled. Not playful. New, savage, and designed to humiliate. Thousands of voices thundered in unison, branding Miovski a “traitor” and worse, mocking his career choices and tearing into his integrity. The noise was poisonous, constant, and deliberately personal. Within minutes, the chants were everywhere — TikTok, X, group chats — spreading like wildfire.
Rangers escaped with a 2–0 win through Thelo Aasgaard and a James Tavernier penalty, but the result barely mattered. Miovski, lurking on the bench, was booed mercilessly during his warm-up, every step met with bile. There was no nostalgia. No mercy. Only rage.
The night descended further into chaos at full-time. Rangers midfielder Nicolas Raskin was reportedly struck by an object thrown from the stands while reacting to the crowd — an ugly moment that summed up just how far the hostility had spiralled.
Miovski later responded online, sounding wounded and defensive, as he attempted to justify his decision.
“Football is a professional game, but I will never forget the love I had here,” he wrote. “To hear those words today was difficult for my family. I chose a path to win trophies.”
But for many in red, that explanation rang hollow. At Pittodrie, ambition without loyalty is nothing more than cowardice dressed as progress.
Rangers boss Danny Röhl hit back, branding the atmosphere “toxic” and accusing Aberdeen fans of crossing the line.
“Bojan is a top professional,” Röhl said. “What he faced was disappointing and unnecessary.”
Yet those words will do little to cool the anger. For Aberdeen supporters, this was not about professionalism. It was about respect — and they believe Miovski showed none.
With footage still circulating, the SPFL is now expected to review the incidents, including the chants and the reported missile. Punishments may follow. Statements will be issued. Fingers will be pointed.
But one thing is already certain.
Bojan Miovski’s name is finished at Pittodrie.
Not forgotten.
Not forgiven.
Branded — permanently — as the villain who chose Rangers and paid the price in full.


