The Scotsman

‘Don’t be mellow over yellow’

● Strachan tells quartet facing suspension if they pick up a booking against Malta to play their normal game and not be ‘bullied’

- By ALAN PATTULLO

Gordon Strachan has ordered his players to play their normal game against Malta tonight despite several being at risk of picking up a ban.

A booking for any out of skipper Scott Brown, James Mcarthur, Leigh Griffiths and Grant Hanley will mean they are suspended for next month’s crucial home Group F clash against Slovakia.

While Hanley is unlikely to start this evening at Hampden, the other three players were central to Friday’s 3-0 win in Lithuania.

But the Scotland manager says he is not tempted to make too many changes against the side ranked 190 in the world through fear certain players might miss out next time.

“No, this has to be done,” said Strachan. “You have to get a win.”

“Play the game,” he added. “But just don’t do silly things. We advised these guys the other night: yes, get angry but don’t kick the ball away or shout at the referee.

“If you get booked by making a tackle that’s going to help us or you make a mistake then there is nothing we can do about that.

“Stand up and be counted. Don’t be bullied by anyone for the sake of not getting that yellow card.”

Strachan was confident Griffiths and Brown will heed the warning despite disciplina­ry issues in the past. According to Strachan, they are different men in the Scotland environmen­t – and they have to be.

“I think we’ve spoken about the maturity of them, we’ve all seen that,” he said. “You get more mature. I don’t know, they seem to have a different way about them here, where they see they can’t get away with doing sillier things at this level. Maybe it is because internatio­nal referees are on top of you.”

Referees are often stricter on the internatio­nal stage. But Strachan acknowledg­ed he’d had the referee to thank on Friday otherwise another player might have been walking a disciplina­ry tightrope tonight – or indeed be banned.

Referee Carlos del Carro Grande relayed a message to Strachan through his fourth assistant that one of the Scotland players was beginning to catch his eye for the wrong reasons.

“In matter of fact, the internatio­nal referee was good the other night,” he said. “They asked me to speak to a player about something that might be a problem later on in the game. So I spoke to him. They are right on top of it, they can see everything.

“They don’t let you get away with anything.”

“It was good,” he added. “Again, you say to the players, ‘the referee is keeping an eye on you’.” Strachan, pictured left, insists Scotland can’t afford to have one eye on tonight’s clash between England and Slovakia at Wembley. A win for England will greatly enhance Scotland’s chances of reaching second place – and a play-off spot.

But a win or a draw for Slovakia will see Scotland up against it again. Strachan underlined the need for England to get three points to strengthen their strangleho­ld on Group F.

So he has no fears about Gareth Southgate’s side being satisfied with a draw. “England are like a Man United or Celtic in that they have to win every game,” said Strachan. “If Slovakia won it would be a real turn up for the books. It would put Slovakia ahead and England would go into the play-off place, which wouldn’t have been thought about [before].”

“To get one-two here is incredible. I know it’s not easy for Ferrari fans to accept ”

Exactly a year ago, Scotland kicked off their latest World Cup qualifying campaign with a 5-1 win over Malta. But it wasn’t long before the storm clouds gathered.

By the end of 2016 Strachan was on the brink, waiting for the Scottish Football Associatio­n to reassure him of their backing. His side had suffered consecutiv­e 3-0 defeats by Slovakia and England following a bitterly disappoint­ing home draw with Lithuania.

The Scots even slumped below the Lithuanian­s in the group last November as Strachan’s approval rating dipped as low as it’s been. But he stayed on, bolstered by the SFA’S eventual backing and his own faith in himself and his players.

A return of seven points from Scotland’s last three games has re-ignited qualificat­ion hopes. “I don’t know if I’ve been vindicated, I don’t look at things that way,” he said yesterday at Hampden. “I just get on with it.”

Strachan is seeking to inspire Scotland to consecutiv­e wins in a qualificat­ion double-header for the first time in a decade with victory against Malta tonight.

He has even hinted he might stay on longer. Or at least he won’t leave the manager’s post without a great deal of anguish. The Tartan Army hope he departs with no regrets and in some considerab­le glory after leading Scotland in next summer’s World Cup finals – if that’s when he goes.

“I enjoy what I’m doing and I wouldn’t give it up lightly,” he said. “Watching the England game [at Wembley] I thought we’d done so many things right. It would’ve been different if it had been a shambles.

“When you look at it, England had more chances in the 2-2 game than they did at Wembley. It was three headers. The goalie’s not made a save. There were a lot of things that you thought were all right.”

On his future after next month, he said: “I [really] have no idea.” Strachan’s current contract runs until the end of the current campaign. We could be entering the final weeks of an era that started just short of five years ago. Or we might be reaching its crescendo.

“Listen, I just get on with it,” said Strachan. “I have got to say, I just love working with these players. Players re-energise you, absolutely. People think it works one way, but it doesn’t. It works the other way. They make you feel young and enjoy it. Over the last three years I have learned a lot more about bits and bobs and systems and things. It has been a great learning period for me as well.”

“They are a good group of lads,” he added. “I love being in their company, absolutely love being in their company.”

As Strachan has noted, it’s the team who have dragged themselves from “a bad place”. But it’s not the team as such. At least it’s not the same players. It’s remarkable to note that against Lithuania on Friday Andy Robertson was the only survivor from the 1-1 draw when the teams met at Hampden last October.

None of the six Celtic players who played in Vilnius had started that earlier fixture. The idea of a constantly evolving team was underlined last week by news 18-year-old Celtic full-back Anthony Ralston, pictured below, had been invited to train with the squad because Strachan wanted to see him play.

No one needs to be reminded that this was how Liverpool’s Andy Robertson, one of the stars of Friday’s victory, got his internatio­nal start.

Strachan asked the then teenage Robertson to come along to training before a game against Croatia four years ago and was soon shown why excitement was building around the left-back.

“I asked him to do one thing and he did it with ease,” remembered Strachan. “I thought: ‘That’s not bad’.” Time will tell whether Ralston’s career will take quite the same trajectory. But his presence last week is evidence that things might be getting better. Strachan is hopeful but realistic. “I think to make us even better we need to get stronger in certain areas,” he said. “That’s up to the youth team football and wherever we are [with that], the 19 and 20 year-olds. It’s unfortunat­e we are stronger in certain areas and not others.

“Matter of fact we had Anthony Ralston in this week training with us. I’ve never really seen him live, so we had him in and that was nice.”

Strachan’s now glad he stayed on as manager. Twice in the last two

years he’s been on the brink – the first time because he was considerin­g leaving on his accord, and the second time after successive 3-0 defeats by England and Slovakia brought Scotland crashing back down to earth following the promising start to this campaign in Malta.

But some momentum has now been regained. Scotland plan to have things back in their own hands by the final whistle tonight. Ideally, England will have defeated Slovakia at Wembley, which, together with a win over bottom side Malta, will mean the Scots can guarantee finishing second with two more wins against Slovakia and Slovenia.

But of course Strachan didn’t want to look too much further ahead than kick-off this evening. He’s rightly wary of Malta’s defensive ability.

England have most recently struggled to break them down. Surprising­ly, only Scotland have gone to town against the Maltese. Even then they were aided by good fortune on the night – Malta’s Jonathan Caruna was sent off and Scotland were also awarded a soft penalty in the same incident.

Slovenia only beat Malta 2-0 at home in June, while the scoreline in England’s 4-0 victory on Friday in Ta’qali disguised the away team’s struggles – they scored three times in the closing minutes.

“It takes a long time to break them down,” warned Strachan. Patience holds the key tonight. But we are reaching the stage where Scotland’s fate will be revealed one way or another.

 ??  ?? 0 Gordon Strachan oversaw a 5-1 win against Malta, above. Yesterday he was readying his squad to face the Maltese again, right.
0 Gordon Strachan oversaw a 5-1 win against Malta, above. Yesterday he was readying his squad to face the Maltese again, right.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? From left, James Mcarthur, Scott Brown, Leigh Griffiths and, inset, Grant Hanley will all miss the vital Slovakia game at Hampden if they are booked tonight.
From left, James Mcarthur, Scott Brown, Leigh Griffiths and, inset, Grant Hanley will all miss the vital Slovakia game at Hampden if they are booked tonight.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom