
Scotland's ill-fated World Cup story finally at a sorry end
Scotland's ill-fated World Cup story finally at a sorry endImage source, Getty ImagesByTom English Scotland's chief sports writer in CharlottePublished1 hour agoThere was something pitiful about the way the lights went...
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Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: Scotland's ill-fated World Cup story finally at a sorry endImage source, Getty ImagesByTom English Scotland's chief sports writer in CharlottePublished1 hour agoThere was something pitiful about the way the lights went out for Scotland at this World Cup. Not just the on-field disappointment, which was tough enough to watch, but the grim and almost lifeless hope in the aftermath, including from Steve Clarke who would eventually resign on Saturday. Hanging from a cliff edge by their fingertips.
Could Ghana beat Croatia by three clear goals, could DR Congo and Uzbekistan play out a draw, could Austria beat Algeria by two or more goals or could Algeria beat Austria by a minimum of four? Praying for results in Philadelphia, Atlanta and Kansas City. What a sorry end to the story.
The Details
One night in Miami: The Scotsmen of the apocalypse Published16 hours agoScotland's elimination from World Cup confirmed Published1 hour ago'Bye-bye, Scotland! ' - Clarke's leaving letter to the Tartan Army Published22 minutes agoThis tournament, just like all other tournaments that they've made it to, carries on into the business end without Scotland. Elijah Just of Motherwell and New Zealand has scored three times as many on his own.
Jonathan David of Canada has a higher xG (expected goals) than the entire Scotland team. We could cite stats until the cows come home, but there's no real point. Everybody accepts that Scotland deserve to depart with their tail between their legs.
The Tartan Army were the best of it, a travelling support that tried to lift the team up and carry them into the knockouts. Even for tens of thousands of foot soldiers, the load was too heavy. In three games, Scotland played admirably for two halves - the second against Morocco when they put them under pressure, and the second against Brazil when they finally had attempts on target albeit when already 3-0 down.
What Experts Say
Who is to blame for another anti-climax? There are layers to Scotland's failure. Some blame the manager's inability to get the best out of his group of players and want him removed despite his new four-year deal.
Some cut the manager some slack by saying the players, though hard-working and fiercely determined, are over-praised and over-rated at this level. Others look deeper at the woeful inability of the Scottish game to develop athletic young talent and the aversion that top-flight clubs have in giving youngsters a chance of first team football and say what hope have you got. The truth is that it's a mix of all of these things - plus other things.
Scotland were in an extremely tough group with the world's fifth and sixth-best teams. One win and two defeats is what most people should have expected, albeit the win was hairy and unimpressive. There was nothing surprising about what Scotland did, or did not do, against Morocco and Brazil.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





