The Scotsman

How Strachan kept his cool when heat was on in Malta

● Effiong’s equaliser gave manager the Broadwood blues but decision to change shape, not personnel, paid dividends

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There isn’t much connecting Broadwood, Scotland’s highest and frequently chilliest senior footballin­g outpost, with a patch of sun-baked land in Malta.

But as Scotland suddenly toiled against their hosts at the Ta’ Qali stadium on Sunday night Gordon Strachan was transporte­d to the scene of one of his bleakest moments as a manager. It’s already over ten years since Celtic came a cropper against Clyde in the Scottish Cup but the wounds remain raw for Strachan, who feared having to field another barrage of criticism as Scotland struggled to respond to being pegged back by striker Alfred Effiong’s equaliser on Sunday.

“It’s one of those moments when you see your life flashing in front of you,” reflected Strachan yesterday. “That was a Clyde v Celtic moment, when I had a midfield of [Neil] Lennon, [Stiliyan] Petrov and Roy Keane. And I [still] got the blame for it!”

Strachan was aware of having too little currency with the Tartanarmy­tosurvivea­nother grave disappoint­ment. Despite handing two players their competitiv­e debuts, despite a line-up most seemed happy with prior to kick-off, he would have been the figure to blame, again.

The supportive and forgiving reaction after Scotland’s last competitiv­e victory – a 6-0 dead rubber win over Gibraltar, a few days after their Euro 2016 fate was sealed – would have felt as long ago as it now is, 11 months.

While he was careful not to go overboard with delight – he was the first to note Malta finished with only nine men – he felt the result warranted some satisfacti­on. Scotland are not good enough to treat 5-1 away victories as commonplac­e. Just as Scotland are not always known for high scoring wins, Malta have a reputation for avoiding being on the wrong end of them.

Despite their lowly ranking, currently 176, they are regarded as hard to beat. So Strachan was within his rights to do some crowing, reminding reporters Croatia had only won a Euro 2016 qualifier 1-0 in Malta a few months earlier. It will be interestin­g how England fare a year from now at the same venue.

Strachan was cheered not just by the victory, but also the manner of it. His players were required to dig themselves out of a hole. Strachan, too, deserves credit for thinking practicall­y in the stifling heat. He admitted responsibi­lity for navigating Scotland out of a potential crisis weighed heavily on his shoulders.

Drawing 1-1 with Malta is certainly a perilous place for any manager of an internatio­nal team with ambitions to qualify for a major finals. But when it’s on day one of a new campaign many were feeling gloomy about it any case, it’s especially unwelcome. Strachan could sense the tension and noticed how it was affecting players fearing the next day’s headlines: “End of the World” was one possibilit­y, “Maltese Dross” another.

Fans harrumphed while reporters toyed with match reports painting depressing­ly early bleak picture of Scotland’s chances of qualifying.

“I thought we started the first 20 minutes great then you get that goal against you and you go ‘woooah’,” he reflected yesterday. “I said to the coaching staff: ‘They’ll take a wee while to get over this.’ So we sat down at half-time and said: ‘This is where we are, this is what we have to do.’”

He refused to panic. “What people were probably shouting was ‘make changes! Make changes!’” he said. “Which ones? ‘Oh, I don’t know. Just make changes!’ We are the ones that have to go ‘right, what are we going to do here?’

“We didn’t change it in terms of personnel, just the shape of it,” he explained. “And it is a shape we normally play, tighter together in midfield. But we were so stretched out that [Darren] Fletcher and [Barry] Bannan did not have someone directly in front of them to pop the ball off to.”

Strachan kept Chris Martin on when it might have been easier to withdraw the striker at half-time, as many wanted. Martin, replaced at the interval on his full debut against England, might have struggled to recover from another such disappoint­ment. In any case, he didn’t deserve to be replaced. Asked by Strachan to

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