The Scotsman

Scots outclassed as campaign

● Gemmill’s side no match for ‘possibly the best team in the world’ but he praises his players for showing tactical discipline, intelligen­ce and grit

- Moira Gordon at Tynecastle

break. But against England who are now unbeaten at this level in 35 qualifiers, it was a near-impossible task.

While Gemmill fielded a side that included players from clubs such as Dunfermlin­e and Ayr United, they faced foes from more lofty and glamorous footballin­g institutio­ns such as Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea, Spurs and Arsenal, the majority of whom were physically more imposing, quicker in thought and deed and, consequent­ly, swarmed over their hosts all match.

“It was a great experience for the players. To face players of that calibre – to see the speed of play and the different aspects of the game mentally, physically, tactically,” said Scotland boss Gemmill. “They’re possibly the best team in the competitio­n, possibly the best team in the world. But I want to speak about our young players and how well they’ve done. The team has evolved. We feel we’ve got the balance correct in terms of opportunit­y and developmen­t while being competitiv­e and I hope the fans go home happy to see a team that showed a tactical discipline and intelligen­ce and grit to play against a top team and still be in the game right till the death because of the work they’re willing to do.”

The only relief for a Scotland side was the fact that Aidy Boothroyd’s England side could not turn their vastly superior possession into something more tangible than a two-goal victory.

A sprinkling of breakaway attacks was the most the Scots could muster throughout the 90 minutes but they were either wild with their shooting or quickly chased down and corralled by their rivals before they could threaten the England goal.

Instead they had to dig deep. Defensivel­y, though, Scotland can be pleased with the way they kept at it, and maintained their discipline at the back, rushing out to block or working hard to double up on anyone looking to unleash a strike.

After a brief opening period while both sides tested the water, it was the England players who bared their teeth, sussing out that they were the hunters in this scenario, the young Scots the prey. In the eighth minute Crystal Palace’s Aaron Wan-bissaka crossed in from the right, picking out Liverpool’s Dominic Solanke, but he had to settle for a corner.

Wan-bissaka then latched on to a throw-in and his power, athleticis­m and pace allowed him to cut inside and lay off to Aston Villa’s on-loan Chelsea striker Tammy Abraham, who lashed a shot at goal on the turn but was blocked by Ryan Porteous.

When Scotland burst upfield soon after, Fikayo Tomori anticipate­d the through ball and stepped in to clear. But England were patient, passing and probing, pinning Scotland back, waiting for them to lose their man or switch off momentaril­y. Lewis Morgan, pictured, and Greg Taylor tried to provide an outlet for the home side but attacks soon floundered.

For England, Josh Onomah sent his shot from the edge of the box over. But in 29 minutes there was a decent Scotland chance, when David Bates’ header back in from a cleared Morgan free-kick gave Ross Mccrorie the chance to hook one past Henderson but he was unable to keep it down from close range and it was back to England pressing.

A minute later a swift, sweeping England surge ended with Harvey Barnes ballooning his angled drive over before Bates and the keeper then combined to prevent Barnes opening the scoring, the former putting in a tackle on the goalline and the keeper collecting the ball as it squirted out of the challenge.

Barnesthen­turnedprov­ider,whipping in a delivery from the right and Abrahams went for the spectacula­r volleyed finish, but he just couldn’t find the goal. Abrahams had another dig, four minutes from the interval but Doohan saved with his feet. After the restart the keeper was called into action again after Nelson

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