The Scotsman

Palmer on a learning curve after difficult birth to Scotland career

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a five-hour drive away, I felt that – with it being our third child – it would be a case of her getting in the car, giving birth and then leaving the hospital on the same day!”

That didn’t prove the case, but he is proud to report all is well with Honor, who entered the world shortly after Scotland’s automatic qualificat­ion hopes for Euro 2020 were quashed.

“It turned out that Beth went into labour on the Friday while the boys were playing Russia,” he recalled. “She was eight days early and a bit apprehensi­ve. I was trying to watch the game on my i-pad while she was sleeping but I couldn’t see too much of it because nurses were always coming in and out.”

It’s fair to say Palmer’s full

LIAM PALMER “The only positive way to look at Kazakhstan is to learn from it”

internatio­nal career has suffered a difficult birth. While he was no stranger to the Scotland set-up having played at Under-19 and Under-21 levels, his call-up to the A squad came out of the blue. It was a traumatic experience, however.

Although not implicated in the loss of any of the goals, he was a member of a defence thatconced­edthreetoa­team then ranked at No 117 in the world. Worse, he had to stew over such a deflating experience on the long flight to Italy. He watched from the bench a few days later against San Marino, Mcleish’s last in charge.

“As far as the game went it was very disappoint­ing, it was a bad result and a bad performanc­e,” he reflected. “The whole trip was a big learning curve for me, the demands of internatio­nal football. Dealing with the travel, the meetings, the time difference and all that.

“All of those things play a part and, ultimately, we probably didn’t get them right, so you have to take that on board.

“Going away now I think we might do things a bit differentl­y. The only positive way to look at Kazakhstan is to learn from it. What’s done is done and you look forward.”

He’s already discerned Clarke has his own way of doing things. “Everyone sits down to eat together and nobody leaves until you’re all finished,” he revealed.

“Everyone walks out to training together, nobody wears flip-flops round the table. All little things that probably don’t sound like much but they are the things that keep the standards up to a level.

“If people are coming in in dribs and drabs, it doesn’t look good. You have to have standards and have rules to adhere to.”

Asked if he was surprised this had not been the case with the last regime, he added: “It’s difficult because it was my first trip away with the team.

“Going back to club level, I’ve seen it done loads of different ways and, especially when there’s a change in manager, standards can get lost.

“It’s up to the new manager to say ‘right, this is what we’re doing’ and for me it’s a lot better now it’s more structured and boys have things they have to adhere to.”

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