The Scotsman

Strachan: Brown could star at top-four club in England

● Scotland boss full of praise for skipper

- By ALAN PATTULLO

Gordon Strachan has insisted that Scotland captain Scott Brown would flourish at a top-four side in the English Premier League

Former England player Paul Scholes had queried whether the Celtic midfielder would have enjoyed the same success down south, prompting the Scotland manager to hit back.

And Brown has the perfect opportunit­y to prove Scholes and other doubters wrong when the Auld Enemies clash in Saturday’s World Cup qualifier at Hampden.

Brown will be key to Scotland’s gameplan as he seeks to round off a season as a treble-winning captain of Celtic with a famous win over England.

Now a TV pundit, Scholes, said at the weekend that he doubted Brown would have had the same influence in England.

Strachan responded: “I understand, everybody has an opinion. In football – on Sky and BT – everybody has got an opinion. But if I was still the manager of any of the teams I had that did reasonably well in the Premier League, I’d take him. Absolutely, absolutely.

“Okay, the game might have changed since I was at Southampto­n. We were fourth in the league at one point and I’d still have had him in the team. I have no problem with people having an opinion on players but I watched him again in training today and he’s back running to how he did when I first signed him for Celtic.

“That’s where he is, and when you’re going into big games like this one there’s nothing better than having people like him around you,” added the Scotland manager.

“The real test of a player, also, isn’t anybody’s opinion who doesn’t watch him every week. Your big test as a player is what your team-mates think of you.

“When you finish your career that’s what matters. The rest don’t matter, your team-mates are the only ones who are the test of who you are, what you are and what you brought to a team.”

Strachan is confident Scholes’ remarks will barely have registered with Brown.

“Honestly, I don’t think the man sleeps but, if he did, he wouldn’t have lost any of it,” added Strachan.

“I don’t think it’ll have bothered him one little bit. It’s like the Player of Year awards [Brown wasn’t nominated] and people were asking if he would have been upset. I think he would have been delighted.

“It meant he didn’t need to sit in front of the media and talk, or get dressed up for a ball.”

It’s not as if Gordon Strachan hasn’t had time to think about how to approach Saturday’s vital clash against England. Although Chris Martin’s winning goal against Slovenia came late, it was still over eight weeks ago that Scotland’s World Cup hopes were re-ignited.

If not every thought since has been occupied with how to beat England, then it’s probably true every second one has. Strachan agreed Saturday’s game – in which he might not even have been involved were it not for Martin’s winner in March – has loomed large in his life.

“I have been thinking about it for a long time obviously,” the Scotland manager said yesterday, at the start of such a critical week in his reign. “You have to look at it and go ‘that was good against Slovenia, do you move it about, do you put guys into different positions where they might not be comfortabl­e, are they comfortabl­e with that system?’

“There are a couple of things to think about and you know fine well nobody is going to tell you which way we are going to play. But we have got a good idea what we are going to do, that’s for sure.”

The danger, Strachan agreed, is over-thinking things. “In the last game the players lost themselves in the excitement of trying to win the game,” he said. “Sometimes you lose yourself in that battle.”

If players are doing that against Slovenia, imagine what it might be like in what is the first game against England at Hampden since 1999. It’s hardly surprising training was supplied with extra zest yesterday morning.

As well as Saturday’s match helping concentrat­e minds, there was the little matter of a win against Brazil just two days earlier.

It’s not often the under-20s can give inspiratio­n to the senior side. But Scot Gemmill’s team’s feat at the Toulon Tournament – the first time in any age group that Scotland have defeated Brazil – was a handy reminder that, over 90 minutes, anything is possible.

So it is with this in mind that Scotland engage with the task awaiting them at Hampden. The players might be more accustomed with bagging spots on the beach at Torremolin­os at this time of year, but Strachan has detected no signs of tiredness. In fact, it’s the complete opposite. They were in danger of doing too much.

Only Leigh Griffiths, consigned to barracks because he was “feeling a wee bit under the weather,” and Darren Fletcher, who’d played in Michael Carrick’s testimonia­l the previous afternoon at Old Trafford, were missing yesterday.

Kieran Tierney, meanwhile, was being measured up for a gum shield in the morning but was in attendance for the non-contact part of the session.

The full-back, likely to play at right-back against England, is experienci­ng no obvious discomfort from the mouth injury he sustained in the Scottish Cup final versus Aberdeen nine days ago. At least he’s match fit, which is not the case with everyone.

“There is a group of them that’s gone about a month without having a game, so we had to put on extra stuff for them this morning, hard work, after it was finished,” reported Strachan. “We took them away and the rest of the lads went ‘well if they’re doing it, we’re doing it’. So they all joined in. Much to the concern of the fitness coach, who was having kittens at the time.”

It’s clear the identity of Saturday’s opponents gives things an extra edge. Scots will wonder if this is being reciprocat­ed down south. Strachan was asked whether he could feel anything in the air last week while at home in the Midlands.

“I don’t go about asking people how passionate they are, to be honest with

you,” he said. “I live in a kind of middle-class area. Unfortunat­ely that’s where I live these days, sorry about that. Matter of fact, the neighbours on both sides of me are Scottish, so I am fine!”

While careful to avoid denuding Scotland, Strachan has to ensure his players do not let passion extinguish game sense. Playing England in a competitiv­e fixture at Hampden is a special – and recently rare – thrill but there’s no point being so worked up as to risk fatally underminin­g your own team’s chances.

“Someone was saying to me about Scotland’s (good) home record in World Cup qualifiers, but Scotland used to be able to boot the living daylights out of any visiting Spanish or Portuguese teams,” said Strachan. “The rules have changed now. People come up and say ‘get right stuck into them and give them plenty.’

“But we can’ t anymore. we give them plenty and we are playing with ten men.”

As ever, there are questions over who might Strachan select to lead the line. Griffiths started the last match and came so close to rectifying not having scored a goal for Scotland.

Luckily for the Celtic striker, his internatio­nal famine was apparently news to Strachan, whose implied obliviousn­ess – “I really didn’t know that, I should so thanks very much” – perhaps underlines how the manager really does have only one thing on his mind.

 ??  ?? 0 Scotland captain Scott Brown knocks the ball to James Morrison during a training session at Mar Hall ahead of Saturday’s match against England at Hampden.
0 Scotland captain Scott Brown knocks the ball to James Morrison during a training session at Mar Hall ahead of Saturday’s match against England at Hampden.
 ??  ?? GORDON STRACHAN “Going into big games like this one there’s nothing better than having people like him around you”
GORDON STRACHAN “Going into big games like this one there’s nothing better than having people like him around you”
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 ??  ?? 0 Scotland boss Gordon Strachan during training yesterday. Far left, Chris Martin celebrates after scoring the late goal against Slovenia that kept Scotland’s qualificat­ion hopes alive. Inset, Kieran Tierney.
0 Scotland boss Gordon Strachan during training yesterday. Far left, Chris Martin celebrates after scoring the late goal against Slovenia that kept Scotland’s qualificat­ion hopes alive. Inset, Kieran Tierney.

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