Rohl has merited the praise that has come his way since picking up the pieces at Ibrox and dragging the team into a title race following Russell Martin's dire tenure.
Rangers have not conceded in their past four league matches, adding to a total of 10 clean sheets in 16 games under Rohl.
There has also been an impressive return from set-piece goals, but evidently concerns remain regarding their ability to create from open play.
"In that final third, there are still huge questions for Rangers," former Premiership midfielder Scott Allan said on Sportsound.
"Mikey Moore was the difference in the second half [on Sunday], playing in the pockets and he can see a pass. But other than him, Rangers were devoid of any real ideas and quality in the final third."
Across the 2025-26 Premiership season so far, Rangers are fifth for open-play goals and fourth for open-play xG.
But how does that shift since Rohl's appointment? For open-play goals, they nudge up to fourth and they climb to second for open-play xG.
Rangers' top scorer in the league is right-back James Tavernier with six - three of those have come from the spot. Centre-back Emmanuel Fernandez is next with four.
Strikers Chermiti, Danilo and Bojan Miovski have three between them.
The Ibrox side have been heavily linked with bringing in another forward, with Hansa Rostock's Ryan Naderi and Cameron Archer of Southampton linked.
Any new striker will need service for them to succeed, though. The hope for Rohl is Skov Olsen, who was viewed as a statement signing, can provide that.
The Dane scored 49 goals and assisted 30 at Club Brugge but suffered a dip in form at Wolfsburg, where he left on loan to join Rangers.
He failed to impose himself on the game at Easter Road as he continues to work his way to full match fitness, but Rohl said he is "very positive" about the winger.
It remains to be seen whether the 36-year-old will feel the same about his club's January business, but he will know there is work to be done on and off the pitch if they are to claw back a six-point deficit.