The Scotsman

‘I should probably have just shelled it into row Z’

● Disappoint­ed Armstrong reflects on his fateful decision which led to Kane’s dramatic last-minute England equaliser

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With 92 minutes and 20 seconds on the clock, Stuart Armstrong was presented with options at Hampden on Saturday evening. The one he chose to take may haunt Scottish football’s collective psyche for some time to come.

As the National Stadium continued to reverberat­e to the delirious celebratio­ns prompted by Leigh Griffiths’ extraordin­ary free-kick double which had turned a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 lead for Scotland, the World Cup qualifier ticked into stoppage time. When Eric Dier’s freekick was scrambled clear by the hosts, England looked certain to suffer their first defeat in a qualifying match for eight years.

Armstrong carried the ball away from the Scots’ penalty area, with passes to Chris Martin on his left or Griffiths on his right available for the counteratt­ack. Alternativ­ely, the Celtic midfielder could simply have booted the ball out of play to run down a few more precious seconds.

He elected to try and find Griffiths, with his slack attempt intercepte­d by Kyle Walker. The rest is now painfully etched on the memory of every Scotland supporter, the Spurs full-back finding Raheem Sterling, pictured, who delivered the cross from which Harry Kane plundered England’s dramatic equaliser. It was an agonising end to what has been a magnificen­t season for Armstrong and he admitted to fatigue and flawed judgment as he reflected upon the fateful moment.

“You make decisions in games,” he said. “It was really late on and, honestly, tiredness comes into play. I’ve seen Griff make a run and it was a poor pass.

“So, in hindsight, I should probably just have shelled it into row Z. A number of things have to happen for a goal to be conceded but I probably should have just cleared the ball.

“You can never tell what phase of play is going to lead to what. It’s just one of those things. When I saw the ball hit the net, my feelings were honestly just total disappoint­ment. We were so close to three points. To end up with just one point, it’s just hard to take.

“The emotions of the game, being 1-0 down and then Griff hitting two unbelievab­le goals to get us back in the lead with so little time remaining – it’s hard to know what to say. To concede that second goal was disappoint­ing, to say the least.” Like the rest of the Scotland camp, Armstrong did his best to try and rationalis­e the consequenc­es of an outcome which leaves their hopes of World Cup qualificat­ion hanging by the thinnest of threads. “It was still a draw with a good team,” he added. “It says a lot about where we are, how far we’ve come, that we we’re disappoint­ed with a point against England. There is certainly a lot to build on and a lot of confidence to take into the next game.

“Can we win our last four games in the group? I don’t see why not. We’ve hopefully given the fans that belief that we can do it. It means so much when they are behind us, as well. It gives us the extra impetus to take something from the game.”

Amid his overall sense of disappoint­ment, Armstrong was delighted to see his Celtic team-mate Griffiths break his scoring duck for Scotland in his 13th outing for his country.

“Leigh has proven himself at club level that he can score goals, there’s never been any doubt about that,” said Armstrong.

“It was always only a matter of time before he scored his first Scotland goals. Now that he has his first two, he’ll kick on. He did really well even

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