Furious Philippe Clement branded the decision to send off Rangers ace Jefte as the worst decision he's seen in his career.

The Ibrox boss was left fizzing after referee Marco Guida produced a second yellow after Jefte had won a header in the second half at Hampden.

It appeared the Brazilian defender was faultless in the challenge but the official viewed the incident as an elbow to his opponent - Oleksandr Karavaiev - and so deemed Jefte must be cautioned.

Due to the decision being a second yellow card and not a straight red, VAR could not intervene in the incident with Jefte forced to trudge off the pitch in disbelief over the call in the Champions League third qualifying round.

And Clement appeared to confront Italian whistler Guida at full-time as he fumed over the huge decision - Jefte had been sent off with the scores at 0-0 before Dynamo Kyiv went on to win 2-0.


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BBC Scotland footage showed Clement in animated discussions with the referee at full-time in a tense exchange.

The Rangers manager does shake the hand of the official but gives him an earful over the controversial decision.

Guida then begins walking off the pitch while Clement continues to speak to the official. The Italian ref continues to walk off the pitch as the Belgian continues to appeal over the shock call.

The referee began walking away as Clement continued to bemoan the decisionThe referee began walking away as Clement continued to bemoan the decision (Image: BBC Scotland)

After the match - with Rangers now dropping into the Europa League league phase - Clement said: “It's a very decisive moment and in the end it has killed the dream of a dressing room, it has killed the dream of more than 50,000 fans. You expect a better level in decision-making, because this is for me the worst decision I've seen in more than 30 years.

“Especially at this level, when there is so much at stake. I have a lot of things in my head, but you guys [the media] know that every word I say is too much. I can get a ban also for the next European game, so let's keep things in my head.