The Scotsman

Adams did enough to merit a start for England showdown

- Andrew Smith at Hampden

It may be 23 years since Scotland last played in a major finals but in so many ways they slipped right back into an old, underminin­g, routine. The fact is strikers rarely score for the nation at major finals.

Ally Mccoist did so, famously and superbly, to earn the ultimately insufficie­nt 1-0 victory over Switzerlan­d in Euro 96. Brian Mcclair netted in a dead rubber 3-0 success over the CIS at Euro ‘92. Those goals stand as the only one netted from open play by a Scotland forward in tournament football for 29 years - a sorry sequence that covers Scotland’s five finals appearance­s subsequent to their 1982 World Cup appearance.

Steve Clarke’s curt response when effectivel­y asked if he regretted not selecting Che Adams alongside Lyndon Dykes in his starting line-up for the 2-0 defeat by the Czech Republic was a tacit admission that he absolutely did. A fact also evidenced by his half-time removal of Ryan Christie for the Southampto­n front man. Christie may have been paired with Dykes, but there was no sense of the two being able to operate in tandem.

With Adams and Kevin Nisbet available to the Scotland manager, his motivation­s for deploying Christie as his second striker weren’t easy to divine. Moreover, Dykes’ wastefulne­ss and Christie’s isolation and detatchmen­t from the Australian, makes it arguable that Clarke could have been better served by setting aside both his first pick strikers in favour of the Adams-nisbet combo he ended the Group D opener with.

Adams, with two goals in four outings before these finals, is a player that has offered Scotland a different dimension across his short internatio­nal career. He is quick, strong and capable of exhibiting an assurance that it can be presumed is not unrelated to the 24-year-old operating in the English top flight. Dykes, for all his unadoubted industry and ability to hold the ball up, is not a penalty box predator - as the Queen’s Park Rangers striker demonstrat­ed by shooting straight at the keeper after he was teed up perfectly by an Adams’ knockdownm­idwaythrou­ghthesecon­d period.

Dykes is now nine internatio­nal outings without finding the net. Two goals across his first four caps provided a false impression of the contributi­on entitled to be expected from the 25-year-old.

The closest to a goal sniffer Scotland have in their squad is Nisbet, who became the first Hibs player to feature in a major finals for Scotland in 47 years with his substitute outing at Hampden. He only appeared in the 78th minute - replacing Dykes - but the Hibs man appeared more obviously threatenin­g, far more likely to nick a goal. As, of course, he did in the 2-2 draw in a warm-up encounter with the Netherland­s the other week that perhaps falsely inflated hopes over Scotland’s

likely competitiv­eness in Group D.

Clarke must consider bold rethinks for Friday’s trepidicio­us trip to Wembley. It is a shot-to-nothing. Surely there is more to be gained than lost by immediatel­y moving to plan B. In that scenario, hand Adams the starting place that seemed his to lose before the line-up was announced for the Czechs.

 ??  ?? 0 Che Adams, with two goals in four outings before these finals, is a player that has offered Scotland a different dimension and made a difference in the second half
0 Che Adams, with two goals in four outings before these finals, is a player that has offered Scotland a different dimension and made a difference in the second half
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