logo
Why Tartan army pine for Postecoglou over cautious Clarke

Why Tartan army pine for Postecoglou over cautious Clarke

That's what the Tartan Army got though, with the Scotland manager stringing five across the back and a lone striker up top against a side who had recently been turned over by Kosovo. Which is fine, if you win, but a demoralising 3-1 defeat that left Clarke's record standing at just four wins from his last 21 games had the sgian dubhs out for the national team's head coach.
Not only was there a clamour for the Scottish FA to relieve Clarke of his duties, but also a mini clamour to replace him with the recently sacked Postecoglou. Or, if you like, the anti-Clarke.
(Image: SNS Group) The obstacles in appointing the former Celtic manager as Clarke's replacement, coming as he is out of a job at Tottenham Hotspur where he trousered around £5m a year, are obvious. Clarke is the highest paid Scotland manager in history, at around a tenth of that figure.
The hefty payoff from Spurs may have convinced Postecoglou that he can move into semi-retirement by going back to international football, and he has been linked with a short-term sojourn in Italy to help the Azzurri navigate the departure of Luciano Spalletti, in fairness. But I'd say the prospect of him returning to Glasgow any time soon - at least to Hampden - are remote at best.
Read more:
Not forgetting the inconvenient fact that both SFA president Mike Mulraney and CEO Ian Maxwell have not the slightest desire to remove Clarke from his position, believing steadfastly that he 'deserves the chance' to take his country to a World Cup. No matter if his presence reduces the chances that the rest of us will get to enjoy one.
What the Scotland fans calling for Postecoglou were really saying though was that they want a manager who will go on the front foot. Who will look to make the most of the talented players Scotland now undoubtedly have at their disposal, rather than filling them with the fear of God by setting them up so defensively.
The Tartan Army have watched Scott McTominay, Billy Gilmour and Lewis Ferguson not only impress in Serie A, but stand out, and win things. That these guys are Scottish is a source of huge excitement, but the feeling among the rank and file is that Clarke doesn't know how to set them up in order to replicate their dazzling club form into the international arena. Instead of swaggering onto the field, they are stymied.
Compare and contrast the approach of Wales against Belgium on Monday night under Craig Bellamy. In his pre-match press conference, the former Celtic striker laid out in no uncertain terms that his team wouldn't be going to Brussels to camp in or take a backwards step.
Now, granted, they were soon pinned back in any case and went 3-0 down in a nightmare opening 25-minute spell. But even then, Bellamy resisted the temptation to tighten things up and simply look to stem the bleeding.
Instead, a goal back from the penalty spot just before half time reinvigorated his team, and he sent them out in the second half to go for the jugular. Thrillingly, they deservedly clawed the score back level, before Kevin De Bruyne broke their hearts late on by hitting a winner.
Ultimately, they lost the game. But you ask any Wales fan their view of Bellamy and his approach, and they will tell you resoundingly that their manager got it spot on.
Clarke is sometimes unfairly maligned. Overall, he was the right man at the right time for Scotland, and his work in getting the nation back to the European Championships not once, but twice, should mean that he has earned the gratitude of the nation for his service.
But once, where his caution was an asset, it has now become the noose around his neck. After a bafflingly conservative approach to the must-win game against Hungary at the Euros, where history was there to be made, he had to show a response. And in the Nations League, he did latterly look to play some more expansive football, shifting to a back four and earning some good results.
But when it came to the crunch in the second leg of the Nations League relegation playoff against Greece, his old cautious instincts cost him again. The only change he made from the energy-sapping first leg win in Athens was to take Ferguson out of the midfield for 33-year-old Kenny McLean. The Greeks, by contrast, made six changes, and ran over the top of his side.
(Image: Alan Harvey - SNS Group) In a home friendly against Iceland, to revert to his old back five to shoehorn Kieran Tierney into the team seemed like a frustrating, retrograde step. And was a worrying portent for how he may look to approach the World Cup qualifiers.
The 4-0 win over Liechtenstein on Monday evening with a good old fashioned 4-4-2 has to be caveated against the level of the opposition, but at least there were some promising signs within it.
Lennon Miller got his first start, and impressed in the midfield. There were five debuts in all, though only emergency keeper Ross Doohan was on from the start. Josh Doig caught the eye, getting half an hour or so along with Andy Irving, but Connor Barron and Kieron Bowie might have expected more than 13 minutes to impress against such lowly opponents and with Scotland in cruise control.
Even in this, there was this nagging whiff of conservatism from Clarke at which many among the Tartan Army are now turning up their nose.
He could do with blowing away that stench by going out on the front foot in the World Cup qualifiers, and if this is to be his last campaign, as he has intimated it is likely to be, at least go out on his sword.
Failure to get to the World Cup is one thing, and quite possible given that Greece and Denmark are in Scotland's section. Failure to have a go, and at least give this group of players a chance, will be more difficult to forgive.
Clarke has nothing left to lose but his legacy. Fairly or not, he will likely be remembered for how he approaches this World Cup. If he makes it, he will be a legend, and his critics will bow to him. As will the Tartan Army.
If he fails, and does so by playing cautious football, he will enrage the fans, and it will be a sad end to his reign.
He may as well go out swinging.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Celtic make official approach for top summer transfer target as they act fast in bid to snap up in demand star
Celtic make official approach for top summer transfer target as they act fast in bid to snap up in demand star

Scottish Sun

time29 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Celtic make official approach for top summer transfer target as they act fast in bid to snap up in demand star

CELTIC have made an official approach for Sweden star Benjamin Nygren as they step up their summer recruitment plans. We told you exclusively yesterday how the Nordsjaelland playmaker was high on the list of Brendan Rodgers' targets as he looks to boost his squad. 2 Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers is keen on the start Credit: Reuters 2 Nygren has scored two goals for his country in four starts Nygren is out of contract in six months time and could be available for a cut-price £2million fee. But the Hoops face competition from the likes of Anderlecht and Copenhagen for the 23-year-old. Teams in the MLS - where Norsjaelland operate a sister club in San Diego FC - are also believed to be interested. He scored 15 league goals in the 2024/25 season a FCK is far from alone in bidding. The Swede is free to negotiate with all other clubs in the world from July 1, when he has six months left on his contract. It's thought a fee around the £2m mark may be enough to get his signature now. Nygren progrssed through the Swedish youth ranks before being given his senior Sweden debut in March by Jon Dahl Tomasson. He scored in both of Sweden's international friendlies in June – victories against Hungary and Algeria. BE bagged a hat-trick for Nordsjaelland against Fenerbache in the Conference League last season. Since moving to the Danish club in 2022, he has scored 35 goals and provided eight assists in 107 games. Thousands of Celtic fans march to Hampden for Scottish Cup final vs Aberdeen amid heavy police presence Last season, he scored 16 goals and provided four assists as his side finished fifth in the Danish Superliga. Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

Inside Celtic target Benjamin Nygren's rollercoaster rise as dream move turns sour then career catches fire in Denmark
Inside Celtic target Benjamin Nygren's rollercoaster rise as dream move turns sour then career catches fire in Denmark

Scottish Sun

time29 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Inside Celtic target Benjamin Nygren's rollercoaster rise as dream move turns sour then career catches fire in Denmark

CELTIC have had their fair share of talented players from Sweden over the years, including arguably their greatest ever signing - Henrik Larsson. The Parkhead club have been represented by a number of Swedish internationals, including Magnus Hedman, Daniel Majstorivic, Freddie Ljunberg, Johann Mjallby, Mikael Lustig, John Guidetti and of course, the King of Kings. 4 Benjamin Nygren is a main target for Celtic this summer Credit: Alamy 4 He's one of Sweden's rising stars Credit: EPA And even more recently they had Carl

Football legend Lothar Matthaus, 64, repeatedly pictured with new 26-year-old 'female friend' after his FIFTH divorce
Football legend Lothar Matthaus, 64, repeatedly pictured with new 26-year-old 'female friend' after his FIFTH divorce

Daily Mail​

time36 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Football legend Lothar Matthaus, 64, repeatedly pictured with new 26-year-old 'female friend' after his FIFTH divorce

German football legend Lothar Matthaus is making waves in his homeland after being repeatedly pictured with a new 'female friend' 38 years his junior. The 64-year-old, who has been divorced five times, has been strutting about in public with 26-year-old Instagram model Theresa Sommer. Matthaus, who won the 1990 World Cup with West Germany and seven Bundesliga titles with Bayern Munich, has been seen watching football, driving, and even at a celebrity ski race with Sommer. Having a gargantuan age gap is nothing new to the Ballon d'Or winner, who shared a 27 year split with his most recent wife Anastasia Klimko. But 38 years is on a different level to any relationship that he has been known to have - though it is not clear if this one is platonic or romantic. According to her LinkedIn page, Sommer studied economics and management at King's College in London before taking psychology at Durham University. Back in April, she and Matthaus were seen attending a celebrity ski race in Ischgl in Austria. They were also at the Allianz Arena in Munich for Germany's semi-final match against Portugal in the Nations League and Spain's final against the latter four days later. Meanwhile, they were also filmed in a car together on their way to an event. German newspaper Bild made contact with Matthaus about his latest connection but he did not reply. When they were at the skiing contest, they told A2 Television: 'We came for skiing, and the rest is a private matter.' Matthaus' life off the pitch has seldom been quiet, with the former Germany captain going through five divorces. Matthaus married his first wife, Silvia, in 1981. The couple had two children - Alisa born in 1986 and Viola born in 1988 - but divorced in 1992. In the same year, Lolita Morena gave birth to his third child, Loris. Matthaus and Morena, a Swiss model and TV presenter who represented her country at Miss World in 1982 and Miss Universe a year later, were married in 1994 but divorced in 1999 shortly before his retirement. Matthaus swapped the pitch for the dugout two years later, beginning his managerial career at Rapid Vienna in September 2001 before taking charge of Partizan Belgrade in December of the following year. Success as a manager may have eluded him, but he found love again in the Serbian capital in the shape of 31-year-old fashion entrepreneur Marijana Colic. Colic, who along founding two fashion brands was the face of Samsung's football-themed campaign during the 2006 World Cup, was married to Serbian agribusiness magnate Miodrag Kostic between 1990 and 1999. She and Matthaus tied the knot in November 2003, but their marriage came to an end four years later after a lengthy divorce case in Salzburg - their last shared residence. The pair initially separated after Matthaus began dating Ukrainian model Kristina Liliana Chudinova in 2007. Colic, who still bears Matthaus' surname, filed for divorce soon afterward. During the year-long divorce case, the couple allegedly looked to reach an out-of-court settlement over the division of their assets. The former Bayern Munich reportedly offered his ex-wife an €100,000 settlement and the ownership of their penthouse in Budapest. His third wife (pictured here with pop star Rita Ora, right) is a successful fashion entrepreneur and was previously married to one of Serbia's richest men While details of the divorce case were not made public, Blic reported Colic did not appeal the ruling, suggesting she was satisfied with the outcome. By the time the divorce was officially ratified in January 2009, Matthaus had already married Chudinova. He was 47 at the time, 26 years older than her. The pair met at the Oktoberfest in Munich in 2007 and exchanged vows in Las Vegas in December 2008. The fact the pair tied the knot came as a surprise in itself, give they briefly went separate ways in February 2008 before reconciling their differences. They lived in Tel Aviv, where the former Germany star took charge of Maccabi Netanya in June 2008, only to terminate his contract in April of the following year with the club mired in financial dire straits. Matthaus' fourth marriage hit the rocks early in 2010, when tabloids released pictures of his wife passionately embracing an unnamed Monaco businessman on his yacht during a holiday in Sardinia. Matthaus married for a fifth and hitherto last time in 2014, when he tied the know with Anastasia Klimko, from whom he had a son, Milan. The couple divorced in 2021 but were spotted together at the Oktoberfest two years later, leading to speculations a rekindling of their flame may be on the cards.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store