The Scotsman

Five selection headaches facing Clarke as he tries to find a way to the Euros

- By MARK ATKINSON

It’s a well-worn cliche that managers get selection headaches, but Steve Clarke could be for given if a migraine comes on,suc hist heb rainwork required to piece together a Scotland team that can beat Serbia tonight and qualify for Euro 2020.

With two calls-off in Ryan Fraser and Grant H an ley reducing the squad to 25, Scots boss Clarke has plenty of options. Goalkeeper David Marshall, captain Andy Robertson, Man United midfielder-turned-defender Scott Mctominay, Aston Villa tyro J oh nMcg inn and strike r Lyndon Dykes can consider themselves “first names on the team-sheet”, but what about the rest? We look at five burning selection posers:

Right-back

Clarke knows and trusts Stephen O’donnell after their time together at Kilmarnock and the current Motherwell right-back started all three matches in October. That trio of clean sheets will enhance O’donnell’s chances of playing in Belgrade, even though Sheffield Wednesday counterpar­t Liam Palmer is back in the squad after injury. Clarke could throw two wild-card picks into the mix, however. Choosing Kieran Tierney on his unnatural flank would at least get an Premier League player into the team, or Callum Paterson – a steady rightback in his Hearts days – could come in and offer physicalit­y and energy. O’donnell probably edges it.

Does Gallagher start?

De clan Gallagher performed so well in Scotland’s last matches at the heart of a back three that it appears mean to be discussing whether he should play. The Motherwell captain’s position is under threat, though, because Forest’s Scott Mckenna – normally a regular – and Leeds United’s Liam Cooper are back in the squad. Clarke must decide whether continuity is preferable to men playing at a higher level.

Left side of defence

Skipper Robertson is a cert at left-back, but who plays inside him? Andy Considine let nobody down when thrown in at the deep end last month, but, with Cooper and Tierney back, his position is far from certain. Getting Tierney and Robertson into the same team has been a bone of contention for some time and while Tierney can play as a left-sided centre-back, his best role is attacking left fullback. The question is whether Scotland should go with the tried-and-trusted of October, or go with a new configurat­ion with more stellar players in November.

Midfield blend

Mcginn starts. End of discussion. Moving Mctominay into midfield reacquaint­s him with his natural habitat, although he was excellent in defence and ought to be kept there. That opens the door for Ryan Jack to play in the deeper midfield role. Callum Mcgregor has been a mainstay for a while now, but, helping Southampto­n top the English charts, Stuart Armstrong can lay claim to a spot, too. Kenny Mclean is likely booked for the bench.

And behind Dykes?

Fraser was pencilled in to dovetail with Dykes before his hamstring injury. Ryan Christie, with long-shot potential and set-play prowess, is a good option to play behind the striker. Armstrong can do that role, too. Oli Mcburnie would make it a straight strike partnershi­p. Leigh Griffiths is potential supersub.

 ??  ?? 0 Stephen O’donnell has helped keep a trio of clean sheets.
0 Stephen O’donnell has helped keep a trio of clean sheets.

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