The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Scots cruise to victory over Faroes

Clarke hails positivity within squad as Mcginn double tees up easy win over Faroes

- RONNIE ESPLIN

Steve Clarke insisted there was plenty to be pleased about after Scotland secured their first 2022 World Cup qualifying win with a convincing 4-0 victory over the Faroe Islands. Aston Villa midfielder John Mcginn, who scored a crucial late leveller against Austria last week, fired the home side into the lead in the seventh minute at Hampden Park then doubled that up with a header in the 54th minute – his 10th internatio­nal goal.

Southampto­n striker Che Adams scored his first Scotland goal with a superb drive from outside the box on the hour, before Ryan Fraser added a fourth with a backpost header in what was the Scots’ last competitiv­e game before the delayed 2020 Euros this summer.

After three Group F fixtures, Scotland have five points from nine and sit in second place behind flawless Denmark, and Clarke stressed the feelgood factor within the camp.

He said: “We always have positivity. Sometimes we get a little trickle of negativity coming from other areas, but within the camp it is positive.

“We think we are a good squad, we think we can be a good team, we know we have to improve but the spirit within the camp is good. So what’s not to be positive about? It is five points from the first three games, which is good.

“We have the Euros to look forward to. It’s the first time in 23 years we can look forward to a major tournament, so what’s not to smile about?

“It was a good performanc­e. We picked a team that would be positive and get at them and we scored within the first seven or eight minutes.

“We knew they would give us a tough game, they are physical, it was difficult to break them down and then we had to be patient to get the second goal.

“They still had one or two chances so we can do slightly better defensivel­y so things to work on, but I am pleased with the team.

“It was a good 10 days. The first (World Cup qualifying) camp, five points, second in the group, we can look forward to September (when qualifiers resume).”

Scotland got the emphatic victory that was a necessity against the Faroe Islands at Hampden Park.

ERIC NICOLSON highlights four talking points at the end of the first part of the World Cup qualifiers as all eyes switch to the European Championsh­ips.

THERE IS NO ANDY ROBERTSON ISSUE

The return of the drop Andy Robertson agenda baffles me. It truly does.

Scotland have got issues on the other side of their defence, at right-back and right-sided centre-back, and yet still there are people who can’t shake off their fixation with what to do on the left.

This really isn’t a problem.

In the three at the back system there seems to be pretty universal agreement that Kieran Tierney played very well against both Austria and Israel. He did so once more.

He was far and away Scotland’s top performer in this triple-header.

Robertson, on the other hand, has divided opinion.

I actually think he was OK in the first half last Thursday night, very good in the second, OK in the first half in Tel Aviv and good in the second.

The point continuall­y missed by too many is that Robertson will never look as easy on the eye for Scotland as he does for Liverpool, purely as a result of the quality of the service he gets and the field position he is able to take up.

The same issues would apply to Tierney at leftback. Do we have to waste a game and create unnecessar­y ramificati­ons by dropping the captain? No is the answer. Robertson was at least a seven out of 10.

He and Tierney have built up a good understand­ing of one driving into the box and the other holding back.

The Arsenal man produced the assist for John Mcginn’s early opener but Robertson’s first-time volleyed cut-back from a Scott Mctominay diagonal which nearly teed up a quick-fire second for Scotland’s talisman was equally, if not more, impressive.

Tierney, whose work to set up Mcginn for the next goal was magnificen­t, is a player at the top of his game and doesn’t need to be at left-back to showcase it.

ABSENCE MAKES THE HEART GROW FONDER

It’s never a good thing when one of the big winners from a batch of matches is somebody who has missed all three. That, however, is undoubtedl­y the case with Ryan Jack.

The Rangers midfielder’s absence is felt by his club side when he doesn’t play – the Slavia Prague games spring to mind – but is felt even more keenly by the national team.

It is hard to imagine the Scots being as passive as they were in midfield in the first half against Austria with the former Aberdeen man at the heart of the action. It was worse in Israel.

Snapping into tackles, making sure gaps don’t open up through the middle and allowing others to get the team moving are Jack’s strengths and unfortunat­ely it would appear there isn’t a like-forlike replacemen­t. Or, at least, not one that will be ready for internatio­nal football anytime soon.

Mctominay, when he’s used in midfield, needs licence to get up and down. Mcginn is at his most effective supporting the strikers, as was shown once more against the Faroes, and Callum Mcgregor is supposed to be the metronome who keeps things ticking over. Mind you, as far as the latter is concerned, it has long been the case that Mcgregor’s selection owes more to past achievemen­ts with Celtic and an inflated reputation than good performanc­es in a Scotland shirt.

Kenny Mclean got another chance to stake a claim but he’s closer in style to Mcgregor than he is Jack.

If ever there was a game in which Scotland could do without a shield for their centre-backs it was this one and, sure enough, the midfield very rarely got played through.

The lack of a press on Brandur Hendriksso­n when he let fly with a sweetly struck 25-yarder on 15 minutes, though, was a reminder that the man who some Dons fans kept telling us was a poor imitation of Graeme Shinnie will be vital to the nation’s hopes in the summer.

WHERE ONCE THERE WAS CERTAINTY NOW THERE IS DOUBT

David Marshall is fit and would be the last of the players who started the first two games of this mini-series in need of a rest, physical or mental.

Steve Clarke has been, and will continue to be, diplomatic but you don’t change your goalkeeper for an important World Cup qualifier for any other reason than being unconvince­d of who your number one choice is.

Marshall’s two mistakes last week both led to goals – one in each match – and the hero of Belgrade (and a few fixtures before that, it must be said) has a fight on his hands to start in the European Championsh­ips.

Craig Gordon was brought back for cap number 56 at the age of 38 and, despite the fact he is playing lower league football, must have a 50-50 chance now of playing the first game of the Euros.

His save from that Hendriksso­n shot was Gordon at his best and an obvious contrast to the long-range effort Marshall let by him a few days earlier.

But there was also a dropped cross just after half-time that had it fallen more kindly for Joan Edmundsson would have been a tap-in equaliser.

There will be no simple decision for Clarke in June and no lack of risk to it.

WHAT NEXT?

As convincing as this victory was in the end, the opening stage of the World Cup campaign wasn’t going to be defined by beating the minnows at Hampden.

Yes, it was a profession­al job but damage has been done with two draws that no amount of spin will change. That being said, it will only take one big result away from home to get things back on track and when the campaign resumes in September the trip to pool leaders Denmark presents such an opportunit­y.

But it’s all about Euro 2020 now.

England will top the group in June, of that there is little doubt, and the semi-final stage should be the least of their ambitions. Whoever fills the problem right wing-back position going up against Raheem Sterling, Jack Grealish, Mason Mount or Marcus Rashford is a potential mismatch and there will be others.

The England game will be the least important fixture of the three, however. It’s the ones either side of it that will matter more.

The Czech Republic, who Scotland beat in October

let’s not forget, are up first and they have just this week been beaten by Wales.

As for Croatia, they lost three Nations League games in a row and then their first World Cup qualifier to Slovenia. Home wins against Cyprus (by one goal) and Malta do not represent a corner turned.

Four points against those two – let’s hope at Hampden with some locals in the stadium – remains as realistic now as it was when the draw was made. Scotland, Croatia and the Czech Republic all have their issues, none of them insurmount­able as far as progressio­n to the knockout rounds is concerned.

This has been a testing week but not an excessivel­y damaging one. Clarke, his players and the nation are right to marry hope with expectatio­n at the Euros.

And that’s not a bad place to be. Let the countdown begin.

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 ??  ?? NUMBER FOUR: Ryan Fraser rounds off a fine night for Steve Clarke’s Scotland with the fourth goal in a convincing World Cup qualifying victory over the Faroe Islands.
NUMBER FOUR: Ryan Fraser rounds off a fine night for Steve Clarke’s Scotland with the fourth goal in a convincing World Cup qualifying victory over the Faroe Islands.
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 ??  ?? OFF THE MARK: Top: Che Adams fires in his first goal for Scotland to make it 3-0. Above: Ryan Fraser’s header makes it 4-0.
OFF THE MARK: Top: Che Adams fires in his first goal for Scotland to make it 3-0. Above: Ryan Fraser’s header makes it 4-0.

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