BARRIE McKay’s parent club have just sealed a league title and have both the Ramsdens Cup final and a Scottish Cup quarter-final replay to look forward to.

But the Rangers loanee insists he has 10 cup finals of his own to prepare for as he closes out the season with Morton.

The Cappielow club need a monumental turnaround to claw back the 13-point advantage relegation rivals Cowdenbeath currently hold over them.

For McKay, every match he plays between now and May will be massive and he believes he can enjoy success of his own by helping the Ton pull off a great escape and avoid the drop. The 19-year-old told the Tele: “It’s obviously a different experience, going from Rangers at the top of the league to a relegation battle.

“What I noticed playing last season was that it was a cup final for every team coming to play against Rangers at Ibrox.

“This season with Morton in the position we’re in, it’s basically a cup final every week for us now. We need to go out and do everything we can to win every game.

“We need to do that to keep the club in this division and we’re hoping we can go on a run. Once we get those first three points I’m sure we can keep it going.

“We play Raith Rovers today and it’s a big game for us. We need to start winning, so hopefully we can get that victory.” McKay has seen a gradual improvement in performances since linking up with Kenny Shiels’ side in December but reckons those displays have not been reflected in their results.

The Scotland Under-21 cap has his fingers crossed that the Ton’s fortunes change this weekend and they receive a reward for their efforts in today’s meeting with Raith Rovers.

He added: “You can see we have got better — it’s just the case that results obviously haven’t matched that.

“I think we’ve been playing well; we just haven’t been getting the results our performances have merited.

“If you look at our last match, we played well against Dundee. I don’t think the outcome was a true reflection of the game.

“We created chances but didn’t score and they created theirs and take one.

“That meant we had to come out and chase the game and they ended up getting a second and winning it.

“If we perform to the levels we’re capable of, we believe we can go out and beat anybody really.

“We need to show that by turning performances into wins.”