Latvia 0, Scotland 1
McCann (88)
02 Sep 2000
Riga
Att: 9,500SCOTS SURVIVE ROASTING IN RIGA
Craig Brown's Scotland survived a torrid 90 minutes in Riga, with
Neil McCann stealing victory against the run of play minutes from the
final whistle. Latvia, the emerging Baltic state managed by Englishman
Gary Johnson, had threatened to over-run the Scots in a lightning-quick
first-half.
However, after Brown discarded his experimental line-up at the break,
Scotland came more into the game and finally snatched victory after 88
minutes. Everton's Don Hutchison rode a couple of challenges to advance
into the box, the ball deflected wide towards McCann and the Rangers
winger swept it home from eight yards.
Brown had sprung a surprise before kick-off by picking Matt Elliott
as a striker. It is a role he has played many a time before for
Leicester City in the English Premiership but was a first at
international level. Brown's overall tactics were new too and he opted
for a 3-4-3 line-up, with McCann and Billy Dodds either side of Elliott,
while Christian Dailly, Colin Hendry and David Weir operated in defence,
with Tom Boyd and Callum Davidson moved into wide midfield roles.
However, Scotland were under pressure right from the kick-off as
Johnson's quick-passing side created all sorts of problems for the
rather static back-three.
Elliott was given little chance to show his striking prowess in the
opening quarter, as the defence were continually stretched by a home
front-line led superbly by Marian Pahars. Indeed, as early as the second
minute, the Southampton striker could have won a penalty.
As Pahars twisted into the penalty box, he collapsed under what
looked suspiciously like a shove from Christian Dailly, only for Swiss
referee Andreas Schluchter to wave play on. Boyd had recently complained
about being uncomfortable when played on the right by Celtic and he was
almost embarrassed after eight minutes.
The veteran stretched to meet a long ball into his own box and he was
fortunate to see his attempted clearance fly a couple of feet wide of
the far post. Bristol Rovers midfielder Vitalijs Astasjevs was next to
race at the Scotland defence and, although his shot from 17 yards had
little power, goalkeeper Neil Sullivan would have been struggling if it
had not been a few yards wide.
It took Scotland 15 minutes to threaten the Latvian goal, a Colin
Hendry header after a corner going well wide. However, Brown's side
appeared to take heart from the Latvian fragility at set-pieces and, at
the next corner, goalkeeper Aleksander Kolinko mis-judged the cross and
Hutchison headed into the path of Elliott.
Kolinko redeemed himself, however, by holding the stand-in striker's
swift turn and shot. Andrejs Stolcers sent a 25-yard drive a couple of
yards over the Scottish bar, but the visitors appeared to have weathered
the early storm and almost took the lead after 34 minutes.
A high ball into the Latvian area bobbed invitingly around the
six-yard box and finally McCann turned the ball towards goal only for it
to be blocked on the line. Latvia, though, quickly regained control and
Pahars latched on to a long ball to the back post, but his volley from a
tight angle was easily held by Sullivan.
The Scots should have been behind after 39 minutes when Davidson
failed to clear in the box and Bleidelis could only blast over from 10
yards. Pahars was then left angry when he again teased the Scots defence
and sent in a drive that looked net-bound before it struck his own
team-mate, Stolcers. However, Latvia's clearest opportunity arrived in
first-half injury time. Astasjevs played a delightful ball in behind the
Scottish defence and Bleidelis again squandered a good chance, his
side-footed attempt from eight yards being parried past the post by
Sullivan.
The Scotland coach had to do something and an injury to David Weir
allowed Brown to move Elliott back in to defence, with Colin Cameron
coming on to bolster the midfield and his Hearts colleague, Gary
Naysmith, replacing Davidson at left back. Those changes almost paid off
immediately, Cameron latching on to a ball played back into his path by
Dodds, but the 20-yard drive flew straight into Kolinko's arms.
A 22-yard drive from Astasjevs was well held by Sullivan, but
Scotland were now beginning to take control. After 69 minutes, McCann's
persistence paid off wide on the left and his cross found Dodds, but
although the striker lost his marker, the normally lethal Rangers man
headed wide from 10 yards.
McCann then had an opportunity himself, only for his shot from 15
yards to be parried clear by Kolinko. Latvia remained dangerous on the
break and Sullivan did superbly to get his fingertips to a stinging,
25-yard drive from Stolcers. It was Scotland, though, who finally got
the breakthrough after 88 minutes and McCann almost added a second in
injury time with an audacious 25-yard chip that forced the Latvian
goalkeeper into a superb, one-handed save.
Latvia: Kolinko, Stephanous, Astasjevs, J. Laizans, Lobanevs,
Blagonadezhdin, V. Ivanovs, Bleidelis, Pahars, Rubins, Stolcers. Subs:
Vanins, Vukans, Mikholap, Zakresevskis, Polakovs, Pelcis, Troickis.
Scotland: Sullivan, Weir, Dailly, Elliott, Hendry, Davidson,
Boyd, Ferguson, Dodds, Hutchison, McCann. Subs: Gould, Naysmith,
McNamara, O'Neil, Holt, Cameron, Johnston.
Referee: Andreas Schluchter (Switzerland) |