The Scotsman

Clarke confident Scots can cope with hectic schedule

● Manager says side can handle arduous fixture list and build on successive wins in November as they battle on two fronts

- Alan Pattullo

The Scotland internatio­nal football team’s own period of lockdown has now entered its eighth month since Steve Clarke’s side hinted at better things to come with successive victories over Cyprus and Kazakhstan in November.

It is now 220 days since the national side kicked a ball in anger. Clarke was expecting long stretches of inactivity interrupte­d by intense periods of action when he agreed to become manager just over one year ago – indeed, that was one of his stated concerns about the job.

But he did not expect this would involve such extremes. No one did.

He is confident Scotland can pick up where they left off and deal with an arduous set of seven, potentiall­y eight, fixtures in the space of just over ten weeks, starting in September.

Providing all goes well, this will include two triple-headers, the second of which will involve three away games in only six days including a playoff final against either Norway or Serbia.

One consequenc­e of the Covid-19 shutdown is that Scotland’s failure to qualify for a major finals is guaranteed to stretch to at least 23 years, despite Uefa’s decision to stick with the “Euro 2020” branding suggesting otherwise. The stands might well be empty, or largely empty, but the pressure to end this miserable run will be as fierce as ever as the nation, however unwisely, looks to the football team to provide some relief amid these trying times. It’s been a long time since the football team were able to offer a morale lift.

Clarke is confident the players remain in good enough fettle to respond to the challenge, with players such as Andy Robertson, John Mcginn and Kieran Tierney all having resumed playing again for their clubs in England. Most Scotland-based players will return in August and as for the mighty, football-starved Tartan Army, who knows?

“It would be helpful, no doubt, having a number of fans in [for the play-off semifinal] – whatever that number is,” said Clarke. “That would help us and qualificat­ion would definitely help the mood of the nation.

“I understand that as the head coach and I take that pressure and embrace it. But it’s really important that we don’t put this particular group of players under all that pressure for not qualifying for 22 years because they’re not responsibl­e for not qualifying over all those years.

“The squad is in a reasonable shape I think,” he added. “Although the strength in depth we have in the midfield we don’t have, to be honest, all over the pitch. But it’s very, very unlikely that that’s ever going to happen. You’re always going to have areas in the team where you could do with a few more players.”

One of these underresou­rced department­s is up front. Clarke has revealed he is “optimistic” that Livingston striker Lyndon Dykes, recently linked with a move to Rangers, will opt to play for Scotland, the country of his parents’ birth, rather than Australia, where he grew up.

The goalkeeper position, meanwhile, once such a formidably strong area, looks suddenly less-well buttressed.

Allan Mcgregor has retired and Craig Gordon’s future at club level remains uncertain. Jon Mclaughlin, meanwhile, has recently joined Rangers, where he faces a challenge to dislodge Mcgregor from the first team.

Clarke was able to report that David Marshall, who has started all bar one of Clarke’s eight games in charge, is continuing to perform well for Wigan Athletic, who have resumed playing in the Championsh­ip.

“It would be helpful, no doubt, having a number of fans in [for the play-off semifinal] – whatever that number is, and qualificat­ion would definitely help the mood of the nation”

STEVE CLARKE

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