The Scotsman

Coach Gemmill makes sweeping changes

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sensible boys and will understand how youth team football works. The same would have happened at under-17 and under-19 level and, as soon as you are too old, you are too old, it’s as simple as that.”

Gemmill digs the new breed featuring many of those players with whom he has enjoyed success at under-17 level. In that bracket are Reading’s Jake Sheppard and Zak Jules, as well as Kyle Cameron, at Newport County from parent club Newcastle, and Alex Iacovitti, a loanee at Mansfield where he has gone from Nottingham Forest. In goal, Gemmill could hand first caps to goalkeeper­s Ryan Fulton and Mark Hurst, the latter with St Johnstone while the former is on loan at Chesterfie­ld from Liverpool.

Chelsea’s highly-rated 18-year-old Ruben Sammut is oneoffouru­ncappedmid­fielders. Hamilton’s Greg Docherty, Crewe’s James Jones, and Aidan Nesbitt, on loan at Morton from Celtic, are the others. In attack, Dundee’s Craig Wighton, pictured below, and Ryan Hardie, currently farmed out to St Mirren from Rangers, will hope for debuts. Gemmill knows the strategy could appear problemati­c if his side take a few dunts, but in his squad he does also have senior figures in 18-times capped Jordan Mcghee, who is with Middlesbro­ugh just now but still contracted to Hearts, Celtic’s Liam Henderson and Oliver Mcburnie of Swansea City.

Gemmill is placing much store on his newbies, though. “For me, they don’t get to play at this level if they are not mentally strong enough to handle losing to better teams,” he said of the potential for some pain during assimilati­on.

“As long as everyone is playing the way they have been asked, in a competitiv­e manner representi­ng their country to the best of their ability, I’d hope the support for them will be there.

“These are the best young players in the country. The players who may be fasttracke­d in the future are undoubtedl­y the best players in the country and everyone needs to get behind them to maximise their progressio­n.”

Gemmill’s progressio­n through the coaching set-up of the national team has come as a result of an impressive command of his duties and equally impressive outcomes, including unprecente­d back-to-back finals appearance­s with the under-17s, whom he guided to the semi-finals in Malta two years ago. The handover from Sbragia with two dead rubbers in a campaign still to complete might have appeared to come out of the blue, but not for the man at the centre of it.

“I was not surprised because we had spoken about me taking over for over a year,” Gemmill said. “Ricky was incredibly supportive of me and spoke to Brian Mcclair [former technical director] about it before the last campaign. It has been something we have been working towards. At the end of the day, the situation has come up whereby we can use these games as preparatio­n for the new campaign. We can make the change now.”

 ??  ?? 2 Scot Gemmill has risen through the ranks of the national set-up and had agreed to move up to the under-21s for more than a year before predecesso­r Ricky Sbragia stepped down earlier this month.
2 Scot Gemmill has risen through the ranks of the national set-up and had agreed to move up to the under-21s for more than a year before predecesso­r Ricky Sbragia stepped down earlier this month.
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