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The steps Clarke can take to get back on track in Nations League

Scotland manager must consider his options ahead of daunting trip to Armenia to complete triple header

- MATTHEW LINDSAY

AS HE stood looking ashen-faced deep in the bowels of the Aviva Stadium on Saturday night and reflected on the harrowing defeat that Scotland had just suffered,

Steve Clarke vowed to identify what had gone wrong and rectify it.

He has much work to do before the national team’s third 2022/23 Nations League match

against Armenia in Yerevan kicks off tomorrow evening.

Andy Robertson and his team-mates were soundly thrashed by the Republic of Ireland in Dublin.

First-half goals from Alan Browne and Troy Parrot and a long-range second-half strike by Michael Obafemi gave Stephen Kenny’s men – who had not won a competitiv­e fixture at home in nearly three years – a comfortabl­e victory.

If Scotland play as poorly again in the Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium then a loss which damages their hopes of topping their section and securing a Euro 2024 playoff spot is inevitable.

So what exactly has been the problem during this internatio­nal break? How does the manager turn things around in such a short space of time and ease the pressure that is mounting on him after two reverses in three games? Here are five things he could do . . .

TRY A BACK FOUR

Switching to a back three when Andy Robertson and

Kieran Tierney were both fit and available for selection made perfect sense for Clarke.

It enabled the Scotland manager to accommodat­e the

Liverpool and Arsenal left backs in the same starting line-up and worked well.

The duo combined to devastatin­g effect in the six-game winning run which the national team ended their World Cup qualifying campaign with this season.

Yet, when Tierney is missing as he is at present through injury, it does not, as we have seen this month, function nearly so effectivel­y.

It could be time to try it from kick-off.

REST HIS BIG NAMES

Nobody in the Scotland camp blamed tiredness at the end of a long gruelling season for the pitiful display in Dublin.

Still, it is clear that key players are not performing with the same energy or sharpness as they were earlier this term.

Grant Hanley, Andy Robertson, Scott McTominay, Callum McGregor, John McGinn and Che Adams, individual­s who ply their trade at a high level in the Premier League on a weekly basis, all look as if they could do with a rest.

Captain Robertson has started in every game of this internatio­nal break and has now played 58 times for club and country in the 2021/22 campaign. No wonder he is lacking a spark.

Billy Gilmour, meanwhile, is failing to exert the same influence in the middle of

the park and can have no complaints about being dropped.

Greg Taylor, John Souttar and Stuart Armstrong would freshen things up and it would be worth giving Aaron Hickey, David Turnbull, Jacob Brown or Ross Stewart an extended run-out too.

BRING BACK PATTERSON

Anthony Ralston, who had netted on his first Scotland start against Armenia last Wednesday night, was far from the worst performer at the weekend.

The Celtic man got upfield well and delivered balls into the Ireland area which his team-mates could and really should have capitalise­d on early in the game.

Yes, the wing-back could have done better to track Troy Parrot at the second goal. But his centre-backs, not least

Jack Hendry, were culpable there too. He has a bright internatio­nal future ahead of him. Could it, though, be time to bring Nathan Patterson back in to the fold?

The Everton man made his return from minor ankle surgery last week when he came off the bench in the second half and acquitted himself well.

Clarke has to be careful not to ask too much too soon of the 20-year-old defender after such

a lengthy injury lay-off.

However, the former Rangers player was sensationa­l at right wing back earlier in the season

and would give Scotland a much-needed edge both defensivel­y and offensivel­y if he

feels capable of starting.

GET THE FANS ON SIDE

Has some complacenc­y crept into the camp? It looked very much as if it might have

The euphoria of the 2-0 win over Euro 2020 semi-finalists Denmark at Hampden back in November has completely evaporated as a result of the Ukraine and Ireland reverses.

The Scotland supporters who had travelled to Dublin made their unhappines­s at what they had witnessed clear at the end of the 90 minutes when they booed their team off the park.

The Tartan Army can accept a defeat if they are satisfied that their heroes have given their absolute all and left nothing out on the park.

If Clarke’s players can show

a little bit of fight in Yerevan it will go a long way towards getting their 12th man back behind them.

DON’T BELIEVE THE HYPE

Has some complacenc­y crept into the Scotland camp following their six game winning streak and eight match unbeaten run this

term? At times in the Aviva Stadium, it looked very much as if it might have.

Their opponents had been on a dire run and had just suffered back-to-back defeats. It would be pushing it to suggest they thought they could just turn up and pick up the three points.

But their hosts certainly showed far more hunger than they did.

Having a will to win still matters just as much as formation, team selection or tactics in the modern game and the national team need to show far more of it otherwise this dip in form will turn into

a full-blown crisis.

 ?? ?? There are a few in the Scotland team who need a rest and Nathan Patterson, right, could
be brought in to freshen things
There are a few in the Scotland team who need a rest and Nathan Patterson, right, could be brought in to freshen things
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