The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

This was an opportunit­y missed but Hanley is staying upbeat

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Scotland must now dust themselves down and try to achieve something few believe possible: get a result at Wembley.

The 2-0 defeat by the Czech Republic at Hampden yesterday opened the campaign on a flat note.

Patrik Schick’s double silenced a raucous home crowd that had been buoyed both by a return to the national stadium for the first time in 18 months and by a first major tournament game in 23 years.

But now, with the most winnable-looking of their group games ending in defeat, avoiding another defeat against England is a must if Scotland have aspiration­s to be more than a footnote in the competitio­n.

“It’s a disappoint­ing result for us and it’s a quick turnaround. But that’s tournament football,” said defender Grant Hanley.

“There are three games in the group stage and we know what we’ve got to do to react. The points and the goal remain the same.

“We’re playing England at Wembley in the Euros. So what more motivation do you need? It’s definitely a game we’re looking forward to.

“It’s the old cliché, you’ve got to play the game, not the occasion. We’ll be prepared and we’ll be positive. That’s the way we’ll go into it.”

While getting a result against Croatia in the final game can also not be discounted, given their below-par showing against England, the loss to the Czechs feels like a big opportunit­y missed.

Scotland huffed and puffed, denied on occasion by Tomas Vaclik’s brilliance and their own shortcomin­gs, but were unable to deliver the result the home support deserved.

The injury to Kieran Tierney – who is expected to be fit for the Wembley game – also had a knock-on effect on Scotland’s preparatio­ns.

Hanley added: “Obviously when you’ve got one of your best players injured, it’s never ideal. Especially at this level of football. But I think you can’t look too much into that. You’ve got to do your job, lads have to be profession­al.

“We know we’ve got strength in-depth in the squad so I don’t think that’s something we have to look at. We have to concentrat­e on the lads who were on the pitch.”

Scotland’s failure to take their chances ultimately undermined their hopes of getting a result but Hanley remains upbeat.

“Of course we need to be more clinical,” he added. “It doesn’t matter who the next game is.

“If you create that many chances and don’t take them, you’re going to struggle to win football matches.”

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