Socrates MacSporran

Socrates MacSporran
No I am not Chick Young, but I can remember when Scottish football was good

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

The Best Of Times - The Worst Of Times

THIS IS the best time to be Chief Football Writer for a mainstream Scottish media outlet, but 2026 brings additional joy. Instead of writing the normal midsummer pish - outrageous rumours about who The Ugly Glasgow Sisters are about to recruit, this close season, they have the added bonus of speculating on who is going to pick up the poisoned chalice, recetly discarded by Stevie Clarke, and become the new Scotland boss.

What joy: freedom to regurgitate any old rumours, carte blanche to make-up pish, a free pass to let your mind run free and all in the certainty, it's impossible to second guess the gigantic minds along the sixth floor corridor at Hampden – because, collectively, that lot haven't enough brain power to blow their bunnets off should they collectively explode.

Well, it will fill column centimetres, but, the elephant in the room will be left unmolested – because the truth is – it doesn't matter who gets the gig, under our warped system of football governance, Scotland will continue to be what we have been almost from the day International Football became truly thus – a lower mid-table nation on the periphery of the game at the top level.

You could make a reasonable argument for suggesting, up until the end of the 1920s, Scotland was one of the leading nations in the international game – mainly because, we ignored the rest of the world, being quite content to play against only England, Ireland and Wales.

Our record against the other three Home Nations as the four British associations were collectively known was a good one. At the end of the 1928-29 season, the record in the Home International Championship was:

  • Scotland – 23 wins

  • England – 20 wins

  • Wales – 4 wins

  • Ireland – 2 wins

Scotland was also in a dominant position in the head-to-head meetings with the other three, for instance, Alec Cheyne's iconic goal, direct from a corner, which won the 1929 meeting and allegedly gave birth to The Hampden Roar clinched Scotland's 24th win over The Auld Enemy, who had only beaten The Jocks 15 times. Our lead over the Irish and Welsh was even-more emphatic.

Over the ten years up until World War II, we continued to hold sway, in the ten fixtures of the 1930s, we beat England by five wins to four with one draw.

After the war and with the Home Nations back in the bosum of FIFA – everything changed. England appointed Walter Winterbottom, a former Manchester United wing-half as their first Team Manager in 1946; and while he did not pick the team, under his tenure, England began to cut into our lead in head-to-head victories, while England became better than us internationally. The SFA clung-on to control, long-serving Secretary Sir George Graham insisted, with Rangers' George Young as Captain, we didn't need a Team Manager.

I have been assured by international team mates of his that Young was indeed the Scotland Team Manager in all but name. Including the games against Austria and Hungary, on the 1955 end of season European Tour, when he was injured and couldn't play but directed operations from the dug out, Young led the side in 50 internationals, the record in these games reads:

  • 30 wins

  • 7 draws

  • 13 defeats

  • 60% wins

  • 65% available points won

  • 1.95 points per game

That record should earn Young a place on the top shelf of any pantheon of Scottish managers.

When Rangers' club commitments meant Young wasn't available for the 1954 World Cup, the SFA Selection Committee appointed Huddersfield Town Manager Andy Beattie as part-time team boss, but, this was hardly a marriage made in Heaven, and, after losing their opening game, to Austria 0-1, Beattie had had enough of interference from the blazers and resigned, although he was prevailed upon to take the team in their second game – the notorious 0-7 loss to Uruguay which signalled us crashing out of the tournament.

Young came back to set Scotland en route to qualification for the 1958 World Cup Finals in Sweden; his thanks, to not be selected for what he had hoped would be his final international, against Spain, in The Bernabeau – which we lost 1-4.

The next decade saw Scotland stumble along. The Selectors continued to pick the team while various Team Managers prepared the squads, with varying degrees of success.

Beattie had a second go at the job, with no more success than first time round. Ian McColl managed a credible near 61% winning ration, but was sacked after back-to-back draws with England and European Champions Spain. Jock Stein was brought in to get us to the 1966 World Cup in England, but couldn't manage it, then after short spells with John Prentice and Malcolm Macdonald in-charge, in 1967, Bobby Brown was appointed as our first full-time Team Manager, and was also given the right to select the squads.

Apart from perhaps one or two of the backwoodsmen in SFA blazers, this switch to giving the Team Manager absolute authority, including over team selection was met with huge approval – by the fans, and in particular by the fans with typewriters from the mainstream media. However, in a definite case of being careful what you wish for, here are the relevant statistics:

Scotland's record when the Selectors picked the team and either the Captain or a Team Manager prepared the team:

  • p 321 – w 177 – d 62 – l 82 – w 55% - points per game 1.85

Scotland's record when the team is selected and managed by a Team Manager:

  • p 535 – w 227 – d 121 – l 187 - w 42% – ppg 1.5

Opinions naturally vary, but, it generally believed that the hardest part of coaching a team is team selection, getting the balance right so a team performs to its optimum potential.

I am not saying we go back to the bad old days when the SFA Selection Committee was all-powerful, so that a guy who was a butcher, baker or candlestick-maker from Monday to Friday could suddenly, by putting on his SFA blazer and sitting in a directors' box on a Saturday become the all-knowing judge of whether or not a particular player was international class.

That system may have got us some big wins, but, it also produced several One-Cap Wonders whose performances in the Scotland jersey had the Tartan Army, to a man, wondering – how did he manage to get picked for Scotland?

Maybe there is a case for something like the All Black's system in Rugby Union, where the Head Coach is a Selector, but, he is not the only guy picking the team and he has other qualified guys assisting him in answering the selection dilemmas.

Such a system might get us into the knock-out stages of the big competitions, but, I fear it will still not cure the blatant failings in our system of football governance.



 

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Myths, Fantasies, Lies And Statistics - A Long Read

WE'RE SCOTLAND – we don't really do sporting reality and that's a fact. In the wake of our elimination from the 2026 FIFA World Cup at the group stage and the subsequent resignation of Stevie Clarke, I've been crunching the numbers over our history in the competition. My conclusion, we've been kidding ourselves on for the past 76 years.

In this post, which comes into the Long Read category, I looked at our record in each of the tournaments since our first entry, in 1950 and I fear, the fuck-up the Scottish Football Association's High Heid Yins perpetrated back then has been the template for every subsequent tournament.

For the benefit of those too-young to remember Thomlinson T-balls and Manfield Hotspur football boots, having totally ignored FIFA and its World Cup when the competition was held in 1930, 1934 and 1938, the four British Associations kissed and made up with FIFA in 1947, even arranging a now legendary game at Hampden and agreeing to enter the World Cup, to be held in Brazil in 1950.

An Own Goal 

The 1949-50 British International Championships would double-up as a World Cup qualifying competition with the top two nations travelling to Brazil in the summer of 1950. All reasonable enough, but, in a display of petulant arrogance which still defies explanation, the SFA Blazers decided, they would only go to Brazil as British Champions, before a 0-1 loss to England gave the men in white the title and meant Scotland has to be content with a short end-of-season European Tour, which brought a 2-2 draw with Portugal in Lisbon and a 1-0 win over France in Paris.

Still better than the fate that befell the English, who did go to Brazil, but managed to lose 0-1 to the USA and were home before their postcards.

For the 1954 tournament, in Switzerland, the Home Internationals again doubled-up as a qualifying group, Scotland again finished second behind England, but, this time, they did travel.

Mind you, the SFA still managed to mess-up big time.

The qualifying group results were: a 3-1 win over Northern Ireland in Belfast, before a 3-3 Hampden draw with Wales and a 2-4 loss to England at Hampden. In the Belfast win, East Fife's Charlie Fleming marked his solitary cap with two goals, not quite the same as club-mate Henry Morris, who, in his only Scotland appearance, against the Irish back in 1949 (in our first World Cup qualifier) scored a hat-trick.

In the Welsh game at Hampden, Willie Telfer, first called into the national squad back in 1949, finally got on the park for his only cap. He was never picked again after refusing to pull down the great John Charles as the Welsh star ran through to score a late equaliser for the visitors.

But, that wasn't the last piece of selection madness in 1954. Rangers had arranged a North American Tour for the end of the season, which meant Scotland regulars, Captain George Young, stand-in Captain Sammy Cox, centre-half Willie Woodburn and regular outside right Willie Waddell would be in North America rather than Switzerland.

Then, to add further embarrassment, the SFA ordered heavy winter-weight woolen shirts, for a tournament played in a high summer heatwave.

The SFA had to register 22 players with FIFA, but, they only took 13 of them to Switzerland, that group included only one goalkeeper – Aberdeen's Fred Martin. Back-up 'keeper Jock Anderson of Leicester City was back home in Barrhead for the duration of the tournament.

After the loss to England, the SFA Selectors, who picked the team, adopted their default position and dumped most of the team. Of the 20 players who had featured in the three qualifying games, only five: Bobby Evans, Doug Cowie, John-Archie Mackenzie, Allan Brown and Willie Ormond were on the flight to Switzerland and Evans, the most-capped player in the squad, wasn't used in either of the two games in the Alps.

The media hadn't come up with the Group of Death notion back then, but Scotland were paired with Austria, then one of the top nations in Europe and defending Champions Uruguay.

A 0-1 loss to the Austrians was not a bad result, but the subsequent 0-7 mauling at the hands of the South Americans was an unmitigated disaster. It didn't help that Andy Beattie, Scotland's first National Team Manager, who didn't get to pick the side, had had enough of the SFA Selectors' interference and resigned mid-tournament – it should have been red faces all round, except, the SFA High Heid Yins don't do embarrassment. Austria and Uruguay, who eliminated England, went on to finish third and fourth respectively.

Aye, in a foretaste of things to come – Scotland had got The Group of Death.

The Selectors again took charge, but, after Scotland saw off Spain and Switzerland to qualify for the 1958 tournament in Sweden, the SFA persuaded Manchester United Manager Matt Busby to manage the team at the tournament. Unfortunately, he was still recovering from the serious injuries he sustained in the Munich Air Crash in February, 1958, and team preparation had to be left to trainer Dawson Walker of Clyde.

After only taking 13 players to Switzerland, the SFA decided to take all 22 registered players to Sweden. They had been criticised for not taking enough players four years previously, this time, the press criticised them for taking too-many players. Still, a 1-1 draw with Yugoslavia was a promising opening.

Tommy Docherty and Archie Robertson hadn't played in that game, instead they were sent to spy on next opponents – Paraguay. The Doc, who would go on to have a spell as Scotland boss, always insisted, the SFA Selectors totally ignored the report he and Robertson submitted – Scotland lost 2-3 to the South Americans and now had to beat France, who had been the most-impressive of the nine European nations to qualify for Sweden, to remain alive. It was a task too far for the Scots, who again failed to get out of the group.

As you can see, a pattern is emerging; when it comes to the World Cup, if it can go wrong for Scotland, it will. Here, leaving aside the own goal of 1950, is a breakdown of our World Cup record:

  • 1954 – Qualified 11 of 11 European nations – finished 15 of 16 finalists

  • 1958 – Qualified 8 of 9 European nations – finished 14 of 16 finalists

  • 1962 – Did not qualify – finished 12 of 28 European entrants

  • 1966 – Did not qualify – finished 14 of 29 European entrants

  • 1970 – Did not qualify – finished 12 of 29 European entrants

  • 1974 – Qualified 6 of 8 European nations – finished 9 of 16 finalists

  • 1978 – Qualified 6 of 9 European nations – finished 11 of 16 finalists

    1982 – Qualified 5 of 13 European nations – finished 15 of 24 finalists

  • 1986 – Qualified 13 of 13 European nations – finished 20 of 24 finalists

  • 1990 – Qualified 12 of 13 European nations – finished 18 of 24 finalists

  • 1994 – Did not qualify – finished 22 of 36 European entrants

  • 1998 – Qualified 10 of 14 European nations – finished 27 of 32 finalists

  • 2002 – Did not qualify – finished 26 of 50 European entrants

  • 2006 – Did not qualify – finished 24 of 52 European entrants

  • 2010 – Did not qualify – finished 27 of 53 European entrants

  • 2014 – Did not qualify – finished 34 of 53 European entrants

  • 2018 – Did not qualify – finished 20 of 54 European entrants

  • 2022 – Did not qualify – finished 16 of 55 European entrants

  • 2026 – Qualified 12 of 18 European nations – finished 35 of 48 finalists

Over these 76 years and 20 World Cups, we have only once, in 1982, qualified as one of the top European qualifiers. In the other nine successful qualifying campaigns (including 1950), we have either got in as a second-placed nation, or as one of the least-impressive group winners.

OK, today the Tartan Army styles itself as the game's ultimate party animals, Scotland games are party central, but, up until reality set in over the first quarter of the 21st century, we definitely had delusions of adequacy, a failing still to an extent evident in our support – including our Fans with lap tops.

Our perennial weakness as a footballing nation is our inability to score goals. Might this be a mental thing? As evidence of this, I submit the legendary story of the 1967 Wembley Wizards' pre-game planning. The Scottish squad, to a man, did not rate the English World Champions they would be facing; legend has it, pre-game planning focused on how they would approach the game.

Problems Finding The Net 

Denis Law, scarred by the memory of losing 3-9 in 1961 wanted Scotland to put as many goals as possible on the Saxons, but, he was over-ruled by a combination of Jim Baxter and Billy Bremner, who allegedly wanted to: “humiliate them 1-0.”

The reality was, Scotland's win was 3-2 going on 6-2, but, if you look today at the BBC highlights edit, you might think Scotland were fortunate to win. But, that's our way – win with a bit of swagger. Never mind piling on the goals.

A look at our goals for and against for our 20 World Cup qualifying campaigns demonstrates where our inability to put the ball in the net has handicapped us:

  • 1950 – average goals scored per game against goals conceded: 6.33 – 1 Q

  • 1954 – 2.66 – 2.66 Q

  • 1958 – 2.5 – 2.25 Q

  • 1962 – 2.4 – 2.2 DNQ

  • 1966 – 2.3 – 1.6 DNQ

  • 1970 – 3 – 1 DNQ

  • 1974 – 2 – 0.75 Q

  • 1978 – 2.5 – 0.75 Q

  • 1982 – 1.12 – 0.5 Q

  • 1986 – 1.25 – 0.5 Q

  • 1990 – 1.5 – 1.5 Q

  • 1994 – 1.4 – 1.3 DNQ

  • 1998 – 1.5 – 0.3 Q

  • 2002 – 1.5 – 0.75 DNQ

  • 2006 – 0.9 – 0.7 DNQ

  • 2010 – 1.325 – 1.25 DNQ

  • 2014 – 1.2 – 1.1 DNQ

  • 2018 – 1.7 – 1.2 DNQ

  • 2022 – 1.63 – 0.9 DNQ

  • 2026 – 2.16 – 1.16

The 1950 average is somewhat skewed by that big 8-2 win in Belfast, while the 1970 figure is also skewed by the 13 times we scored in two goal feasts against Cyprus. However, until the 2026 campaign, we hadn't averaged better than just over a goal a game in almost 50 years of qualifying campaigns.

In attempting to qualify for World Cup Finals, we have played 142 games, over which we average 1.633 goals per game scored – 1.077 gpg conceded.

Our record in the Big Show, on the nine occasions we turned-up is as follows:

  • 1954 – 0 goals scored – 8 conceded: average 0-4

  • 1958 – 3 goals scored – 6 conceded: average 1 – 2

  • 1974 – 3 goals scored – 1 goal conceded: average 1 – 0.33

  • 1978 – 5 goals scored – 6 goals conceded: average 1.66 – 2

  • 1982 – 8 goals scored – 8 goals conceded: average 2.66 – 2.66

  • 1986 – 1 goal scored – 3 goals conceded: average 0.33 – 1

  • 1990 – 2 goals scored – 3 goals conceded: average 0.66 – 1

  • 1998 – 2 goals scored – 6 goals conceded: average 0.66 – 2

  • 2026 – 1 goal scored – 4 goals conceded: average 0.33 – 1.33

Overall our record in finals tournament is:

  • 9 tournaments – 26 goals scored – 45 goals conceded: average goals per game: 1 – 1.73

Frustratingly, we haven't scored a goal per game in each of our last four tilts at the final tournaments, it's now 44 years since we bettered that benchmark, and the 1982 figures have undoubtedly been helped by sticking 5 goals on New Zealand in our opening game.

In all, both qualifiers and final tournament games, we have played 168 World Cup games, in which we have scored 258 goals – an average of 1.5 goals per game. We have conceded 198 goals in these matches, an average of 1.18 gpg.

A total of 166 players have scored for Scotland in World Cup games, either qualifiers or final tournament matches; 51 of these players have scored more than one World Cup goal and the top ten (actually 11) Scottish World Cup goalscorers are;

  • Maurice Johnston – 9 goals

  • Kevin Gallacher – 9 goals

  • Kenny Dalglish – 7 goals

  • Joe Jordan – 7 goals

  • Jackie Mudie – 6 goals

  • Denis Law – 5 goals

  • Ally McCoist – 5 goals

  • Robert Snodgrass – 5 goals

  • John McGinn – 5 goals

  • Che Adams – 5 goals

  • Lynden Dykes – 5 goals

Our 26 goals in Finals tournaments have been shared amongst 20 players, of whom 16 have scored only one final tournament goal. The players who have scored more than once for Scotland in the Big Show are:

  • Joe Jordan – 4 goals

  • Kenny Dalglish – 2 goals

  • Archie Gemmill - 2 goals (in one game)

  • John Wark – 2 goals (in one game)

  • Jimmy Murray, Jackie Mudie, Bobby Collins, Sammy Baird (1958), Peter Lorimer (1974), John Robertson, Stevie Archibald, David Narey, Graeme Souness (1982), Gordon Strachan (1986), Stuart McCall, Maurice Johnston (1990), John Collins, Craig Burley (1998) and John McGinn (2026) are the single goal scorers.

When it comes to consistently scoring – that goals per game ratio – you obviously get regular outliers. For instance, his hat-trick in his only international, that first-ever World Cup qualifier back in 1949, makes East Fife's Henry Morris, statistically our top marksman, with a 3-00 goals per game average; just ahead of his club-mate, Charlie Fleming, who bagged a brace in his only international in 1954 and there are anomalies too when we look at the scorers of our 25 goals in finals (I discount the own goal in the Iran game in 1978).

Here the averages read, in descending order:

  1. 1.00 gpg - Sammy Baird (Rangers) – (1 game, 1 goal, 1958)

  2. 0.66 gpg - Archie Gemmill (Nottingham Forest) – (3 games, 2 goals 1978) : John Wark (Ipswich Town) – (3 games, 2 goals 1982)

  3. 0.57 gpg - Joe Jordan (Leeds United, Manchester United, AC Milan) (7 games, 4 goals 1974, 1978, 1982)

  4. 0.5 gpg - Jimmy Murray (Heart of Midlothian) – (2 games, 1 goal, 1958) : David Narey (Dundee United) – (2 games, 1 goal 1982)

  5. 0.33 gpg - Jackie Mudie (Blackpool) – (3 games, 1 goal 1958) : Bobby Collins (Celtic) – (3 games, 1 goal 1958) : Peter Lorimer – (Leeds United) - (3 games, 1 goal 1974) : Stuart McCall (Rangers) – (3 games, 1 goal 1990) : Maurice Johnston (Rangers) – (3 games, 1 goal 1990) : Craig Burley (Celtic) – (3 games, 1 goal 1990) : John McGinn (Aston Villa) – (3 games, 1 goal 2026)

  6. 0.25 gpg – Kenny Dalglish (Celtic, Liverpool) – (8 games, 2 goals 1974, 1978, 1982) : Steve Archibald (Tottenham Hotspur, Barcelona) – (1 goal, 4 games 1982, 1986) : John Collins (Hibernian, Monaco) – (1 goal, 4 games 1990, 1998)

  7. 0.17 gpg Graeme Souness (Liverpool, Rangers) – (1 goal, 6 games 1978, 1982, 1986) : Gordon Strachan (Aberdeen, Manchester United) (1 goal, 6 games 1982, 1986)

For the purposes of this piece, I have categorised Kenny Dalglish as a midfielder rather than a striker, some might argue about this, however. Any way, the five strikers in my list: Messrs Jordan, Mudie, Lorimer, Johnston and Archibald scored goals at a median average of 0.4 goals per game – just below the 0.5 benchmark for a top-class international striker.

The 12 midfielders on the list posted a median average of 0.35 goals per game, which is around the expected average for an international-class midfielder. All I can say about the one Scottish goal scored by a defender in a World Cup finals game: David Narey's “toe poke” against Brazil in 1982 is – great strike as it was, as was noted at the time – it was a clear case of poking a slumbering bear with a stick.

My conclusions – well, given our midfielders score at almost the same level as our strikers, perhaps, in a Scottish International context, Craig Levein's 4-6-0 formation wasn't stupid.



 

Sunday, 28 June 2026

Thank You And Good Night Stevie

I HAVE BEEN tidying-up my Facebook feed this week. I have a background in road transport, so the first posts to be blasted were the several ones which feature HGV drivers going about their business and, in the process, pissing-off Audi and BMW-driving wankers, who, not having a clue what is happening, take offence at 44 tonne vehicles being on the road.

The next feeds to go were the many Old Firm pages I see, wherein the most-staunch and devout post pish, about who their clubs are going to sign, who they should sign and, this past month, calling for the head of Stevie Clarke, on the grounds he hasn't been selecting enough players from their clubs for the Scotland side.

Well, at least these knuckle-draggers have their wish – Sir Stevie has, with the dignity which has marked his spell as Scotland boss, stepped down from what is now becoming akin to the comparable England job – Mission Impossible.

Stevie has, for me, done a sterling job as Team Manager/Head Coach. In spite of working within a totally-flawed system, he managed to get us to the finals of three major competitions – two European Championships and one World Cup. Yet, throughout his tenure, he has been unfairly-criticised by some of the hacks and many of the fans whose first loyalty is not to the national side, but to the twa cheeks o' the same erse o' Scottish Fitba – aka The Old Firm.

Let's be honest here. Scottish Fitba has been, irrespective of Stevie's efforts, been going downhill for generations. Successive High Heid Yins, those club officials who get themselves elected to the decision-making jobs at Hampden, have spent more time elbowing their way into a prominent place at the feeding trough than making the decisions which take our game forward.

We have put very-small men into big jobs inside Hampden for years and this latest World Cup failure is more evidence of this.

But, we also have a problem with our fans – the Tartan Army. OK, they travel hopefully, in huge numbers, but, they never arrive at the destination they crave, the place where Scotland's representatives – either national team or club side- are competitive rather than merely making-up the numbers in either the two major international competitions: European Championships or World Cup, or the three pan-European club competitions.

Still they turn-up, feeding the failures and inadequacies of the Blazers who are mis-managing our game.

Less than 24 hours after Stevie Clarke's resignation The Scotsman, one of the two serious Scottish broadsheet newspapers has publishd a list of 13 candidates to replace him. I have been sat around a Sports Desk when such speculative pieces are put together and this list strikes me as fairly-typical. One or two names, which have you thinking: “Aye maybe”; a further two or three which get the response: “You have to be joking”; and finally, at least a couple which come under the heading: “Now you're taking the piss”.

The Hootsmon's list reads:

  1. Duncan Ferguson

  2. Russell Martin

  3. Neil Lennon

  4. Shaun Maloney

  5. Brendan Rodgers

  6. Robbie Keane

  7. Derek McInnes

  8. Scott Brown

  9. Steven Naismith

  10. Steven Gerrard

  11. Alex Neil

  12. Ange Postecoglou

  13. David Moyes

The one name on that list that gets me excited is the final one. Moyes has the experience, he's the right age and a management team of him and Big Duncan Disorderly just might work. If nothing else, Big Dunc might scare the shite out of enough of the blazers to get the necessary changes to the system implemented. However, could the SFA afford the compensation Everton would demand?

I would also, straight away, discard the non-Scots; although, that said, Wee Lenny has been here long enough now to qualify for naturalisation, and he is a Ginger.

Ach well, it will give the boys in the mainstream media something to do during this ever-shorter close season.





 

Friday, 26 June 2026

A Typically Scottish Paradox

I NEARLY DID what I never do – and bailed out of a Scotland game; but, VAR rescued me. I wondered, when we qualified back in November, how we would blow this World Cup – familiarity with the original video and the subsequent sequels having convinced me it would all end in tears. I never for a moment thought, handing gifts to Brazil would be our chosen form of hari kari this time.

Had VAR not rescued Jack Hendry, I would have shut off the TV there and then and gone to bed, but, against my better judgement, I hung around. We may yet, somehow, scrape into the last 32, but, this is Scotland, I fear once again, we will be quoting Private Frazer as we survey the wreckage of another failed campaign.

Our virtual no show last night at least cheered-up the England fans. Bad as their over-hyped team was in only drawing with Ghana, they still played better than we did in Miami.

I saw a great philosophical quote on social media – regarding Scotland at major tournaments: “It's not the hope that kills, it's knowing that the hope that kills is going to kill us”. Sums us up rather neatly. Every tournament, off we go with high hopes, but, in the back of our minds we know those hopes are going to be dashed, it's just, we don't as yet know how we will mess up this time.

I can see us finishing-up ranked ninth of the third-placed teams in the groups, failing to qualify by one goal, in which case, who gets to carry the can – Grant Hanley or Scott McKenna?

Would not getting out of the group be so bad? It might save us from an even-bigger embarrassing exit at the last 32?

I mean, honestly, can you see our collection of honest triers getting any further?

Then, once we have pulled ourselves together and dragged ourselves home, we can revert to type. The Glasgow-based papers will call for Stevie Clarke's head and suggest we ought to have played more Old Firm players – totally forgetting, the Old Firm squads are not exactly over-flowing with home-bred talent.

That's the problem with Scottish Fitba in 2026 – we don't have many Scots playing.

This tournament has been our tenth tilt at the global show, and you know what, statistically, it's been our fifth-best effort.

Our best showing was in 1974 – when we went unbeaten through our group, but failed to qualify for the knock-out phase, finishing 9th of the 16 competing teams. In that tournament we amassed 5 points, from one win and two draws, finished with a +2 goal difference and a 33% winning record.

Next best was the much-maligned 1978 campaign, when we finished 11th of the 16 competing nations. We amassed 4 points from one win and one draw, finished with a -1 goal difference and a 33% winning record.

In 1982 we again amassed 4 points, from one win and one draw, we had an equal goal difference, again a 33% wining record and ended up 15th of the 24 competing nations.

We don't yet know where we will end up this year, but, if we do have to come home having again failed to get out of the group, the consolation is, we have still performed better this time than we did in 1954, 1958, 1986, 1990 and 1998.

The truth is, we are consistently poor at the World Cup and an awful lot of wee nations we used to, and perhaps still do consider to be “Diddy Teams” have got better than us.

That's not Stevie Clarke's fault, he can only work with what he's got, perhaps the censure ought to be directed at the High Heid Yins of our game, who have gone down the road of buying-in ready-made non-Scots, of questionable pedigree, to the detriment of native talent.

Our lack of top-class talent is most-evident when it comes to goal-scoring. We have now played 26 games in our 10 tilts at the World Cup Finals. Only twice, when we beat Netherlands via Archie Gemmill's great goal in 1978, and four years later when we stuck five on New Zealand, have we scored more than two goals in a single game in the tournament.

Much was made of John McGinn joining the elite group of scorers who have scored more than 20 international goals for Scotland. He's in there with Hughie Gallacher, Lawrie Reilly, Kenny Dalglish and Denis Law. Of that elite group only Gallacher has scored at a goal a game or better for his country, while only Law and Reilly have bettered the 0.5 goals per game benchmark for an elite striker.

Until we unearth a striker capable of hitting the back of the net regularly and the midfielders capable of supplying him with ammunition, we are never going to get out of the group, should we ever again qualify for a World Cup finals tournament.

Unearthing that striker isn't Stevie Clarke's job, that;s down to the clubs and the coaching system, which clearly isn't working. Aye, Private Frazer was right.



 

Sunday, 21 June 2026

Bigger Doesn't Mean Better

OTHER THAN those now rare ocassions when we blow winning positions against THEM, I don't get carried away when Scotland lose. Long years of disappointment have cured me of falling into the usual Scottish trap of failing to treat those twin imposters (triumph and disaster) both the same – any way, that's a very old-fashioned, English attitude.

OK, maybe we should have had one, possibly two, penalties against Morocco, but, this is Scotland; ok, we get the penalties – is there any guarantee we score them? Those Tartan Army foot soldiers who support any side other than either one of The Bigot Brothers, fine they ken, in Fitba, The Diddy Teams don't get the breaks.

In Boston on Friday night, Scotland – FIFA ranking 43 – was The Diddy Team, against seventh-ranked Morocco. If you think The Scottish Football Association “arranges” things to suit a certain two Glasgow sides – they're amateurs compared to the footballing Gnomes of Zurich. Morocco were always going to get the breaks from officialdom.

It's not as if Morocco could be taken lightly. That nation has a proud football reputation, from the days of the great, the original Black Pearl – Libra Benbarek, who was a World-Class Talent 75 years ago. They gubbed us at France'98 and are the current African Champions.

Steve Clarke knew it would be a tough game, some, if not all, the members of the Tartan Army knew this as well. Putting our natural disappointment at another defeat aside, losing 0-1 wasn't a bad result.

We now move on to Miami, to face Brazil. Now, I reckon this 2026 Brazilian side is perhaps their worst since 1974 – when, lest we forget, we still couldn't beat them. If we have a go at them, I reckon we could beat them – provided we find a defender to do an efficient man-marking job on Vinicius Junior.

I wasn't surprised at Brazil beating Haiti 3-0. I said before this whole circus kicked off, the Haitians probably had one half-decent game in them and it was just our luck that we would get them on that day. This may be a poor Brazilian team, but, it is still a Brazilian team.

However, this is just the sort of uphill battle which brings the best out of Scotland, let's hope we can do and maybe we can. Mind you, the traditional Scottish approach to the World Cup is to go out on goal difference or something; which suggests we could well end up as one of the third-placed sides who fails to make it to the knock-out rounds.

Now – forward tho' I cannot see, I guess and fear. All those previous World Cup failures has got me to the state of preparing for the worst, but still being shocked at what happens to us. I can see us not progressing, in which case, 2026 would become our worst-ever World Cup Finals showing. That might yet happen.

In all honesty, I am, for all the valiant efforts of the Tartan Army, struggling to become enthused with this tournament. FIFA's determination to dumb down the game, to “Never mid the quality – feel the width” has turned what ought to be a true showpiece into a marathon slog.

UEFA did the same with the European Cup, when it became the Champions League. When the competition was restricted to merely the champions of each individual league in Europe, winning it meant something. Then, some of the so-called bigger clubs felt they ought to be in it every year, pushed through expansion and it became the bloated marathon it is today.

I could live with a European version of the North American professional sports leagues, the current mish-mash turns me off. Professional fitba – internationally and at club level – is a total mess and I don't see the desire within the game to sort it out.

To repeat, I fear we could maintain our dismal record of finding disappointing ways to exit the World Cup, but, the main thing I have learned from this year's competition is – bigger isn't better and enlarging the tournament has not led to better quality.

There might be something to be said for copying the likes of the ICE HOCKEY World Championship and have various divisions. Qualification for each division would be via results in the various confederation tournaments, such as the European Championships, the African Championship and so on, with, as happens in Europe's Nations League, promotion and relegation leading up to World Cup games every four years, as now.

Forty-eight nations is too many, it dilutes the product. But, I doubt if those Gnomes of Zurich will agree with me.