The Scotsman

Love will find a way as Scotland seek revenge against Spain

-

that night, a cold analysis at how Group D has unfolded so far suggests that Spain going through to the quarter-finals is far more likely.

They beat Portugal 2-0 in their first game and eased off in the second 45 minutes having already got the job done. They then lost by the same scoreline to England on Sunday but had a penalty decision in their favour reversed when the score was 1-0.

They also had an incredible 74 per cent of possession against a side which could well go on to win the tournament.

Scotland, by contrast, shipped six goals to England and then spurned excellent early chances against Portugal before losing a horror goal and ending up on the wrong end of a 2-1 scoreline earlier on Sunday.

Despite these results, Love remains defiant. “I think we can get the two goal win – our luck has to change at some point,” she said.

“We had our chances against Portugal and the majority of possession. We hit the post twice so here’s hoping for a change of fortune against Spain.

“Of course we owe Spain one. We also owe Scotland one because we have to show we can win and compete against the best teams. We don’t want to leave the tournament without any points.”

The glimmer of hope from the Portugal game, which Scotland should have buried in the opening 25 minutes, was the first goal for the women’s side

0 Jo Love: ‘Worst moment’. in a national championsh­ip. It was scored by outstandin­g Chelsea teenager Erin Cuthbert, who must now start her first game of the Euros against Spain.

The attacking midfielder came on as an early secondhalf substitute for Lana Clelland, whose first-half misses were so costly. Although she is not a striker, Cuthbert obliged with an equalising goal which she did as much to create as to finish.

Clelland and Vaila Barsley, whose failure to clear a deflected cross led to the gamechangi­ng first Portugal goal, had never started a competitiv­e game for Scotland before the Euros.

“We’ve had to make changes all the time,” head coach Anna Signeul pointed out. “I hate to sit and just have a lot of excuses – that feels terrible, because it’s not what we’re about.

“But there has been a lot of adversity and having to find new combinatio­ns.

“It has just been very tough from the start when we started to lose so many players.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom