The Scotsman

Strachan wants Hampden rocking for Slovakia clash

● Scotland manager calls on Tartan Army to recreate great World Cup nights of old

- By ALAN PATTULLO

Gordon Strachan has called on the supporters to create a Hampden atmosphere akin to World Cup nights of old when Slovakia are the visitors to Glasgow next month.

Scotland’s resurgence in Group F means that next fixture has now reached cup final-like status.

Strachan’s side dropped to fourth place on Monday on goal difference but their own 2-0 win over Malta means they can secure second place with two victories in their last two matches.

Slovakia, currently in second place, visit Hampden on 5 October before Scotland travel to face Slovenia three days later. But the second game will be rendered almost redundant from the Scots’ point of view unless they win the first fixture at Hampden.

A draw would all but end Scotland’s chances of qualifying, with Slovakia facing Malta at home in their last game. Strachan urged fans to make it another big World Cup night under the floodlight­s at a packed Hampden.

“Of course I can get excited,” Strachan said yesterday. “Once I get over here, once I meet this group [again] and get to the hotel at Mar Hall I just go, ‘bang, here we go’.”

He went on to urge the fans to roar the team to success.

“There are other things coming through at the minute that make us all excited,” he added.

“The young players give us real hope. On the right side of midfield I could have picked four – any one from four that would have done a great job there.”

Not so long ago Strachan’s prospects as Scotland manager looked bleak. But three wins and a draw from the last four fixtures have shot his side back into contention. Anticipati­on is now building ahead of a game set to recall a tense Hampden clash with Italy in a Euro 2008 qualifier ten years ago, when Scotland lost 2-1.

The manager looked further back to past games at Hampden when qualificat­ion was in sight. While Strachan made the point that it was slightly easier to qualify in the past, he was being hard on him- self – he was part of the squad that played eight matches en route to the World Cup finals in Spain 1982.

“You’re going back a bit with Czechoslov­akia [1973 and 1977] or Spain [1984],” he said. “They were big nights. It was like a play-off in those days.

“There were only three teams in the group [in 1974 and 1978 World Cup qualifying],” he added. “You both played Denmark and battered them and then it was really just a play-off. It was nothing like it is now. The grind and grind that goes on, to ask players to play ten games.

“I understand people want to go back and reminisce. But if you actually analyse it – to get to the World Cup you probably only had to beat one team.”

“Of course I get excited There are things that make us all excited. The young players give us real hope”

Many feared Scotland’s World Cup qualifying campaign going from bad to worse. In fact ,it’s gone from bad to a whole lot better. But Gordon Strachan admits there’s been an emotional cost on the way.

The manager has revealed the campaign has taken a toll – the extent of which he won’t ever let on because he says it’s no one else’s business.

But the stress has been a price worth paying when players applaud each other in the dressing room after games, as happened following Monday’s win over Malta and the victory in Lithuania four days earlier.

The six points accrued from these fixtures mean that, for the first time since 2007, Scotland have won both ties in a double-header. It’s the first time they’ve done so in a World Cup group since 1997.

What it all means is that Scotland are very much alive in the group again. The aim at the beginning of these two latest rounds of fixtures had been to see Scotland’s fate transferre­d back into their own hands.

In that respect it was mission accomplish­ed, with the wins giving thescotsas­pringboard­fromwhicht­o try and secure a play-off place. Attention now turns to next month’s final games against Slovakia and Slovenia – with the first being crucial to Scotland’s renewed hopes. Strachan can sense – and indeed hear – how morale has improved within the squad.

“It’s pleasing when you are looking at guys in the dressing-room after and everyone is clapping and looking forward to the next game with each other,” reflected Strachan.

“They are talking and giving each other a round of applause – so that’s good. I’m pleased watching them and seeing the staff enjoying themselves.”

Circumstan­ces were rather different in the bowels of Wembley in November. Reporters shuffled around as Strachan was saying his farewell to players. Nobody – journalist­s or players – knew if they’d be seeing the manager in this capacity again. No one knew if it was farewell until next time or farewell full stop.

But Strachan survived the uncertain hours and days afterwards, when his future had appeared in major doubt following the 3-0 defeat by England.

He returned home and drew succour from his family, friends and own self-belief. He then resolved to make sure he exuded confidence and belief when walking back into the team HQ at Mar Hall in March, before Scotland’s next assignment against Slovenia.

It was that game when Scotland revived their fading World Cup hopes, Chris Martin, pictured right, ignoring the audible boos that greeted his arrival as substitute to score the late winner. Strachan stressed there were no sports psychologi­sts, no gimmicks, involved in the re-boot. He said: “It’s not anything you do differentl­y. You walk in there and you make sure you are the leader with your coaching staff.

“You make them feel comfortabl­e about themselves. It’s not one talk – it’s the whole thing. It’s hard when you are losing games. Trust me, it’s hard.

“That’s the time you are tested as a football player and as a manager and coach. I didn’t call for a sports psychologi­st. We didn’t start drinking more water. We were all right, we did the same things. Believe me.”

Strachan accepted it had been a tall order to get back into the qualificat­ion frame – and it remains one. But he’s satisfied he’s now found the right blend of players to try to pull it off.

“I would never have said this was impossible, but it was going to be hard,” he said. “But they have shown they can deal with hard, that they can deal with pressure.”

For Strachan, too, it was taxing. A hero with Scotland as a player, the danger was he might become estranged from the Tartan Army.

“You have to remember that the worst thing in football is talking aboutyours­elf,”hesaid.“it’stheworst thing. I can spend all night here talking about anyone else, but not me.

“I find it difficult and I don’t want to go into what my thoughts are, my thought process.

“There were a couple of things [that kept me going],” he added. “I like working with the players and I like my job. I also think ‘right, where do we go? What’s coming up? Who is progressin­g?’”

Now Strachan must contemplat­e his options for Slovakia and Slovenia. After sending out an unchanged side against Malta, he will pray his current favoured XI will steer clear of injury in the coming weeks.

Only three of those who featured on Monday played in the 3-0 defeat in Slovakia last October – Kieran Tierney, James Mcarthur, Leigh Griffiths and Grant Hanley.

“It was a strange game,” recalled Strachan. “We got to positions where we wanted to get and the final pass wasn’t good enough. “Nobody else will understand that. We get there, that’s the plan, can we deliver it? No. The first hit at goal actually goes in the back of the net for them. “I have to step back from that and say… hmm. Once you walk away from games if there is nothing there, if there is no hope, that’s the time you go, ‘wow, that’s it [finished]’.”

But, even amid the rubble of such a comprehens­ive defeat in Trnava, he sensed the situation was retrievabl­e. It is to Strachan’s credit that Scotland’s qualifying flame burns brighter now.

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 ??  ?? 0 Scotland manager Gordon Strachan roars on his troops in the 2-0 victory over Malta at Hampden.
0 Scotland manager Gordon Strachan roars on his troops in the 2-0 victory over Malta at Hampden.
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