RANGERS legend Brian Laudrup has claimed there is a "disharmony" in the club's play at the moment.

The Ibrox hero reckons there has been a shift from the "unity" that carried the club to an incredible Europa League final - and demanded his former club find their groove again.

Laudrup has admitted he's aware from his own time playing that one big performance can turn the tide again.

And he's desperate for a much-improved performance against Napoli on Wednesday to banish the nightmare back-to-back 4-0 defeats against Celtic and Ajax.

In his Daily Mail column, Laudrup wrote: "There was so much unity about Rangers towards the end of the season. Within the squad and among the fans.

"Now, it looks as though there is disharmony in the way the team plays.

"They have to find that harmony again as quickly as possible. I know from experience that it can change in one game.

"One big performance and result against a club like Napoli would restore belief to players and fans and make it a lot easier to move on from there and back into the Premiership."

Laudrup also questioned Giovanni van Bronckhorst's Rangers Champions League comments ahead of the second matchday.

The former Ibrox favourite was left puzzled by the manager's decision to make the claim that it would take hundreds of millions to compete in the Champions League.

Citing the Europa League wins over Borussia Dortmund and RB Leipzig, Laudrup insists Rangers can compete and branded the comments 'not the wisest thing to say in public'.

He added: "After the Ajax game, Van Bronckhorst spoke about needing hundreds of millions to compete in the Champions League. His comments have caused a lot of debate. I don't think they were the wisest things to say in public.

"Last season, Van Bronckhorst's team took on Dortmund and Leipzig two Champions League drop-outs and got the better of them. Okay, the standard in Group A might now be even higher but Rangers have previously shown they can compete against teams with considerably bigger budgets. No one expects them to win the Champions League. Or be in contention for the latter stages. That's stating the obvious. But the least you expect is for them to put up a fight within games.

"Each time you have a defeat like the last two, it becomes harder and harder to climb the mountain again. But Rangers must haul themselves up. They badly need a performance offering signs of improvement. And a stabilising result. Most fans would accept a draw tomorrow night as long as the performance was there."