• 6 months ago
Part Two: Join Scotland international Pat Nevin as he picks his greatest Scotland team from the past 50 years alongside Scotsman sports editor Mark Atkinson and chief football writer Alan Pattullo.
Transcript
00:00Welcome back to our special Scotsman football show where Pat Nevin names his greatest XI
00:18from the past 50 years of Scotland players. We know who is in goal and the back four for
00:24the match against Germany on Friday.
00:27Now for the midfielders then, so I'm going to go to a position that you'll know all too
00:32well, the right side of midfield, the right wing.
00:34Right wing, so we'll do the right wing next. I don't even think there's a debate on this
00:42one. I really don't. Again, it's my position, I've watched players all through my career
00:51playing in that position and there are very, very few that are geniuses and Jimmy Johnson
00:58was a genius and he was an absolute genius. Now the length of time he played wasn't as
01:04long as other people. There were certainly not as many Scotland caps. We have to remember
01:10back then there was an odd dynamic, a Celtic Rangers thing, there certainly was an odd
01:17dynamic then and the fact that he got, I don't know how many caps, you'll tell me.
01:2223 caps.
01:23I get more caps than Genki. See that's a joke, that's just a joke. And I'll tell you something
01:28about number of caps, don't gauge ever by number of caps because it was much harder
01:33to get caps years ago because there was less games, fewer games. But Genki, when I said
01:38to somebody recently, they were asking me about favourite players and best players that
01:42I'd watched, I said obviously Jimmy Johnson. To annoyingly being English, he said, who?
01:49And I said, I watch, I've got this thing, I watch every player and I kind of deconstruct
01:55what they do and their technical abilities and their styles and their ways to beat people
01:59particularly. Genki had some of his skills on Messi, he had some of his skills and that's,
02:05you kind of get higher praise than that. He's one of the best if not the best players I've
02:08played the game, argument over Maldon. But Genki had some of the skills, quite a few
02:13of them. Close balls, ball control, yeah, he had it, it was of that level. I learned
02:20more tricks from him than anyone else but couldn't do them as well as he could obviously
02:23because he was astonishing. But watch him destroy, I mean I'll show my age again here,
02:30I mean that was that European Cup semi-final in 1970. Watch him destroy a fantastic, filthy,
02:39Leeds team and he did, he destroyed them. Was he an inspiration to you? He was when
02:45he was younger, yeah he definitely was when he was younger but I was just seeing his best
02:51coming off his best and I was watching the new group come through at Celtic at the time
02:57and Danny and McGrane who were already mentioned, there was Louis McCarrie, there was George
03:02Connolly, there was a lot of good players coming through then. So I knew, right, he's
03:06special but I'm not going to try and bail it because you can't. There was other players
03:10that I thought, right, I'm going to try and be more, but at the time it was just the joy
03:14of seeing creative football, skills, beating people, doing it for the love of it and you
03:22can watch Jinkie and not think that. You really couldn't. So I mean, throw a couple
03:26of names at me and I'll bat them away if you like. I think it's an unarguable Jimmy Johnson
03:32and I'm quite excited to have a former Dundee player in this team. Of course, he's like
03:36pre-Everton. It took him 40 minutes I think to get Dundee in there. But a greatest ever
03:42Celtic player, you can't ignore the greatest ever Celtic player, can you? Jimmy Johnson
03:46was voted as 23 caps, as we said, four goals, six caps in 1974, I think those were his last
03:56caps. So he very much was on the way out in 1974, wasn't he? And it did end in slight
04:02ignominy, I think that's fair to say, over a drinking session in Oslo. He had a few there.
04:08Yeah, he did have a few. Perhaps that adds to his greatness in a way. We're talking about
04:12Scotland players and Jimmy Johnson had that dash of devilment, didn't he? Oh yeah, I mean
04:18I was very, very much the opposite of the kind of person I was. I used to look at people
04:23like that and go, can you not just behave a bit more and have a few less? I learned as
04:29I got older, there were certain players, one will mention in a minute, you take that devilment
04:34away and you take something away from the game. There are people like that and Jinkie
04:39was definitely one of them. Yeah, absolutely. Can you think about any other options for the right?
04:45I think it's quite interesting that we look at wingers now, right-side wingers, and we
04:51think, why is Scotland not producing enough players like that? Because obviously back
04:57in the 60s and 70s we had one of the world's best. And I also think, I look at wingers
05:03now and people with skills and tricks and pace like that, they're the most attractive
05:06players for youngsters to watch and potentially be inspired by. But in this country we definitely
05:11have had a dearth of those. And of course, some Scotland teams now don't play with wingers.
05:18Some teams are getting their width from their full-backs and wing-backs. So it's almost
05:22like a lost trade in some respects. I think if you were to put someone, I'd be fascinated
05:26to see if you put someone like Jimmy Johnson in modern day football, how would he get on?
05:30And how would he be played? How would he be deployed? Oddly, in very modern football,
05:35very well he would get on. Because there is a resurgence now. If you look down at some
05:40of the best players that people want to see. I mean, Foden down south, he's not a winger,
05:46but he'll play inside. Remember David Silva was playing down there. There are certain
05:50players down there that, the old idea of sticking you in the wing. You could be the best form
05:55of your life. See if nobody gives you the ball, you're stuffed. So, Jinkie or somebody
05:59like that, you wouldn't be a winger. You would move in. You would be more creative and you
06:04would be a 10 or an 8 or whatever. And you had an ability to float. So they would get
06:10on okay now. You have a look at the past 10, 15 years. Xavi, Iniesta, Messi. These people,
06:18they're tiny, but they were skilful. And the game is a wee bit more protected. I mean,
06:24I was at the very famous game where Celtic played at Atletico Madrid. And it was assault
06:30after assault after assault after assault. Not just Jinkie, but others as well. You never
06:35forget things like that. He just got on with it most of the time. Even though he knows
06:39that he's going to get assaulted again. And it wasn't a wee hard tackle. It was vicious.
06:45So, the bravery of the man as well. He would have been, certain players, I had a great
06:51one recently, somebody said to me. Players wouldn't get into the modern team. We were
06:56talking about Liverpool earlier and I thought, you're right, the game's moved on. Oh yes,
06:59it's moved on. So would Hansen get a game in the current team? Oh yeah, apart from Hansen.
07:05And then they kept on naming him. Yeah, apart from him. Ian Rush. Oh yeah, apart from him.
07:09And you kind of have to understand that real world class players in their era, you can't
07:15help when you were born. So I'm trying to be as fair as I can over that. I might have
07:20certain rose down to spectacles, but I'm trying to be as fair as I can. You're right
07:24Pat, to do what Jimmy Johnson did in that era and as you say, the amount of punishment
07:30you got from other players and the lack of protection from referees, it really was something
07:34very special. I'd hate to see the state of his shins at the end of a match. But you talked
07:40about, you're almost embarrassed to think you've got more caps for Scotland. Oh yeah,
07:45almost. You've got one more goal as well. I think Jimmy Johnson got four goals, you've
07:49got five, is that right? But you're right, there's different eras. I just wouldn't compare
07:54them. Everyone does. It's a big thing we do in the modern game, everyone compares stats
07:57all the time. They tell you nothing. They tell you a vague ball thing. Oh he scored
08:02X amount of goals, yeah, but that was Estonia and Malta. It's different, it really is different.
08:08So I don't take anything from that at all. Look at the quality of the player. We're talking
08:13about that, we've not even mentioned Weestrack. Gordon is an amazing player. Yeah, exactly.
08:18Absolutely brilliant, yeah, Dundee again. But a really, really, really special player.
08:24But in actual fact, it's hard to look past Genki. Yeah, well it's interesting because
08:28Gordon features highly in our top 50, top 10. Rightly so. Yeah, absolutely, top 6 in
08:33fact. But again, that feeds into the fact that we're talking about the last 50 years,
08:38Jimmy Johnson's very much at the end of his Scotland career. In 1974, you know, the 50
08:45years encompassed. If it wasn't what they'd done for Scotland, it's a different thing.
08:49The question I'm, I've had to focus the way I'm looking at it, if I had these players
08:54at their best, where would I put them? What team do I want to put out? And I'm putting
08:58out a team that's going to... You said you wanted to go for them as well. Yeah, exactly.
09:03Okay, right-sided centre mid. Right, unbelievably difficult, this one. Really, really difficult.
09:11There's so many. This man in front of me, Gary McAllister, really special for a long
09:17period of time. I think we're in a period at the moment where John McGinn, he's pretty
09:22spectacular, good for his... Slightly different position from one of two midfielders, although
09:27he can do that and often does it for Villa. Yeah, and did it earlier in his career as
09:31well. He was one of those players that could be strong enough to sit in that team and field
09:35and dominate. And do you know the joy of watching John coming through? You know, at that time
09:39I was watching his coach, he had us every week, and you just, you're just smiling at
09:44what he was doing. Did you think he'd be as good as he is? I told plenty of people down
09:50south. I remember the day, I was on BBC Radio 5 Live in Villa Bottom, and it's a classic
09:58one, they just don't know what they're getting at. And they asked me, what about this young
10:03lad, John McGinn? And I said, and I remember my phrases, Villa fans, you don't know it
10:09yet. Of course, Villa are in the Championship as well, isn't it? I said, you don't know
10:14it, you've just signed your new favourite player, and you don't know it yet. And they
10:18were going, really, really? I'm like, yes, I know this thing. It's not that I'm spectacularly
10:24knowledgeable and everything, I'd watched enough of the kid coming through. I remember
10:29Chelsea, I was working a lot with Chelsea at the time, and they were looking a wee bit
10:34but not really interested. And I'm thinking, actually Villa would be a better call for
10:38him. I think he made the best call in the world. I think you've maybe put over a face
10:44there, someone who might actually be talked about too. Fletch. I didn't like that strip
10:49by the way. For attitude, I don't think you'll get a better Scotland player. For pure attitude.
10:58And he'll tell you himself, a very, very, very Scott McTominay as well. Very, very similar
11:08in ways. But I have to go on to the ones I'd really strongly consider. Right, go on, I'll
11:14give you another chance. Go on, throw in who you'd be considering. I mean, the argument
11:18between Barry Ferguson or somebody. Barry as well, yeah. He's an exceptional player,
11:23I still remember watching him. Almost rule Wembley, that play-off game in 1999, the second
11:31leg, which Scotland did win 1-0. I thought Barry Ferguson just was supreme, that really
11:38came with age I think. Head up, played with his head up, I loved that. And just imperious
11:43and loved watching him. Again, didn't play in an era when Scotland were particularly
11:49successful, but really did give everything to the cause. And in the same way as Fletcher
11:55did, Darren Fletcher, 80 caps. He really became one of a stalwart after being brought
12:02in by Bertie Vogts I think. You mentioned Darren Fletcher, I'm going to go back to him,
12:05because I think you're thinking, oh, there's definitely a reason to be biased. But I look
12:09at Darren Fletcher's career, and also what he had to battle through. He won the European
12:13Cup, and he was a linchpin of a really successful United team. And we're talking about a right-sided
12:20central midfielder who could do a bit of everything. He could score goals, he could defend, he
12:23had an engine. And I know that there's probably, again, I'm looking at players that I've watched
12:28in my lifetime, I don't see many better than Darren Fletcher to play in that midfield role.
12:34And actually when you talk about a 4-4-2, I think Darren could do that, because I think
12:38he had a bit of everything. But I know you're going to come out with somebody else. Again,
12:42this is where we talk about that era, what we're used to. Again, Darren, you would always
12:48want him on your team, if you get your team with him in it. And to be honest, early in
12:52his career, he was seen as a bit of a water carrier, but he was much more than that. And
12:57as his career went on, he became more and more and more of a player. And any player
13:01who improves, improves throughout their career. It's amazing how many don't. They get to a
13:05bit and then they stay there, and it's a high level. He improved and improved and improved
13:09all the way through it. But I'm afraid it's none of them. You can't ignore Souness. You
13:18can't ignore them. There was a period of time, Italy, playing in Liverpool. If you
13:26actually had a name for Scotland's team, and he was available and you didn't pick him,
13:31they'd get the psychiatrist to have a wee look at you. You need something hard in there,
13:36controlling in there. Could score as well. Okay, another one of the ones you say, what
13:41did he do for Scotland? Look, I'm playing against Germany. I need somebody who's got
13:46all the rounded capabilities. And he had it fiercely competitive, doesn't even touch
13:53it. And although some people don't like him or whatever, you don't want to be liked when
14:00you're in that position. Certainly in that game. And there was a long period where I
14:06think most people felt that top clubs in the world would all take him. Yeah, genuinely
14:11world class, isn't he? Number two in our top 50, I'm glad to say. If you didn't put
14:17him in, you would. Not even anyone with a certain age, he just looked stupid. Yeah,
14:22absolutely. Three World Cups, played in three World Cups. Football Writers Dinner a couple
14:29of weeks ago, Graeme was there, spoke about, you do wonder what might have happened if
14:35he'd played in that last game against Uruguay. He'd have been sent off. Probably. It would
14:42have been 10 v 10. Rightly. But yeah, you do wonder what might have happened. Strangely
14:48he was chopped for that game by Alex Ferguson, if you know what I'm saying. And Graeme was
14:52talking about it at this dinner when he was making this speech and he said, absolutely
14:57no complaints with Alex Ferguson because he was suffering terribly with food poisoning
15:01and he just couldn't do what was required that evening against Uruguay. But a real case
15:09of what might have been if Graeme had been there against the Uruguayans. As you've suggested
15:15Pat, absolutely just a wonderful, wonderful talent, so much skill, but knew how to behave
15:21himself. The other side of it, yeah. The other side of it. There's been a lot of hard men
15:25in the game, but weren't they as hard as they pretended to be? He was. See I think
15:31as soon as, I think in my era, as a manager and a pundit, I think that it's quite sad
15:36when you talk about players of a certain generation that you never saw and you hear people talk
15:42so oddly about them and you wonder, if I'd watched them for 15, 20 years, what would
15:46I think of them? But no, I think, I don't think you're going to have any arguments with
15:51what Graeme says. Perhaps your harder task is deciding who goes next to him. It is unbelievably
15:57hard because we've named a whole bunch of them already, none of whom I'm going to choose.
16:04I wondered if John Collins might feature for you. John may be considered wider, so we've
16:11got a left wide midfield. John could play in the central midfield as well, but in actual
16:18fact it comes down to two. One, I think, blindingly obvious, and the other less so.
16:25The blindingly obvious is Paul McTighe. Hart was, again, had he gone down south and all
16:34the rest of the work that he could have had, he could have chosen Man United or Liverpool
16:37or Arsenal, he could have done what he liked, no problem at all. But he controlled games.
16:43We're talking about people controlling games. Goalscoring, don't know how many he scored
16:47for Scotland, I don't know what his cap numbers are. 76 caps, 9 goals. Midfielder, controlling
16:55games, 1 in 7 for a central midfield controlling player. Again, not renowned at all for a tackler.
17:03Not renowned for having any great pace, yet he controls games. We have got a player, another
17:12Celtic player playing in the central midfield right at this moment, playing for Scotland
17:16who is just as important. In a similar way. I do look at various players and when you
17:24play alongside players you know when they're real, real quality. I'll be honest with you,
17:29over the years there's players I've thought are good players. Very, very few I think,
17:34oh you're special. We always called him Hart, but Paul was very, very, very special for
17:41a long time. Because you can't be that, I wouldn't call him slow, but he wasn't quick.
17:47And not known as a tackler, yet completely known to control games. Not only domestically,
17:54in Europe, and internationally as well. Paul was a really great one.
17:58Yeah, well you mentioned the goalie, Andy Gorham being dubbed the goalie, I think the
18:02public's day was knowing Celtic fans, particularly the Maestro. You don't get that name without
18:07being pretty special do you? Yeah. And here's the bad news, he's not getting in.
18:15Oh it's torture. I don't know, it's a toss up, right, and this is maybe, there will always
18:21be one that people go, oh what? Are you joking? And this will be my, what are you joking player?
18:29Alright, you're not even going to have a guess are you? I'm scared to, I'm looking on this
18:34board here and seeing that there could be somebody that might. I don't think he's here.
18:37No, no, no. I think it will surprise a lot of people. And, no, again, because I watched
18:45football a lot when I was younger, and I was always utterly gobsmacked by one player when
18:52I watched. And people forget, 1974 who was Scotland's captain? Oh, I'm going to embarrassingly
18:59say I don't know Alan. I think it was this David Haye. And David Haye, watched him play,
19:07he would play, at that time, every single top club wanted him. He ended up going to
19:12Chelsea, everybody wanted him. He turned down Arsenal, everybody knew how good he was. Within
19:18the game, everybody knew. Left back, right back, centre back, straight back, centre midfield,
19:24didn't matter. Just didn't matter, at all. There's very, very few players like that, that you
19:30just think, I'll stick you anywhere mate. Understated, again, I have to admit, hard as nails.
19:36But, one of these guys, one of the big things about playing football, you want to play with
19:41players that don't give the ball away. Never give the ball away. Made it look effortless
19:46sometimes. And I would say of all the players I've picked today, he'll be the most underestimated.
19:53I think a lot of eyebrows would go up and say, what? In front of Paul McStay? Or whatever.
20:00It's a big, big, big, big call. Then he got the injuries.
20:0627 caps, World Cup in Germany as you said, and obviously a serious knee injury.
20:13Eye injury, dislocated retina, had a big effect on his game.
20:19Again, there are some players that you watch that, not under the radar, because he was
20:25an international, I think he was the captain for that squad, but he was certainly vice-captain
20:29or whatever. But everybody wanted him, and everybody knew how good he was.
20:36David, big call, and it's painful to put him in front of Paul McStay, and John McGinn,
20:45and all those others. But in that I'm going to have four attacking players up there.
20:50I need a bit of power. And if I've got David Haye, and I've got Souness, I'm alright.
20:57You're going to win that midfield battle?
20:59I think so.
21:00I wonder if you might have given the game away then about your left-sided or left-winger
21:05when I mentioned John Collins. I heard you talk about John Collins earlier, and obviously
21:09hold him in high regard. Having picked Souness and Haye in that midfield, is he an obvious
21:15man to go wide left, or is he one of many?
21:18He's one of many. He's one of many, many. I actually think it's one of the toughest
21:23positions to pick. First of all, for the first time I'm going to choose a player who's
21:30outside the list.
21:32We were waiting for this. It's only taken us to that point.
21:36As I say, as a wide player and an attacking player, I would always try and work out everyone's
21:41trick. Their best tricks. There were two players whose tricks I could never get. One was Tam
21:45Burns. I couldn't figure out, he didn't seem to do anything. He just glided and people
21:51would fall over and he just walked by. Another player who wasn't quite that beautiful footballer.
21:56But in actual fact, John Robertson of Nottingham Forest. Now, his trick was ridiculous, because
22:06he would just walk up to you. You're thinking, the way you look. You can't go from a stand
22:12and start. I tell every attacking player, if I'm coaching anyone, you need to be moving.
22:18Because when you're moving, he's moving backwards and if he tries to go to you, you've got the
22:22advantage. Not Robbo. No, I'll be stationary. And then I'll wait for you to move and I'm
22:27gone. He was extraordinary for a period of time. But not a huge amount of caps, it has
22:32to be said.
22:3328 caps, John Robertson.
22:36Basically made the goal in the European Cup final for Nottingham Forest. If you ask anybody
22:41like Croffey and all the rest, you'd just think he was a genius. And because he didn't
22:45look the right part and he was sitting on a flag and all that stuff. All that stuff
22:50almost plays into the Scottish thing. Weird, different. If you met him in a pub, drinking
22:57a beer and having a fag, you wouldn't be surprised. It's one of them. What a talent. But I'm not
23:03picking on him.
23:05Giants, he's another one as well.
23:07David Cooper, we spoke about.
23:10Really a very special talent, I think. But the argument possibly is he didn't quite do
23:16it enough for Scotland. Again, didn't 22 caps over an 11 year span.
23:22I remember one game playing.
23:2413 years actually.
23:26Again, some players didn't always want to be available. I'm not sure Cooper always wanted
23:31to be available. I remember one game, some people might remember it, playing for Scotland
23:36against the Republic of Ireland. We had to win at Hampden Park. They beat us 1-0. I was
23:42in one wing, Cooper was in the other wing. Honestly, we must have put in about 40 grosses.
23:47Cooper was slinging them in from everywhere. He was a genius player and a fabulous player
23:54to watch. At the time, after Rangers, you ask any Rangers fan about him, they'll tell
24:00you all that sort of stuff. Even when he goes to Motherwell, he's just incredible when he's
24:06there. I have to say, I'm utterly struggling with this one.
24:12Are there any others? You're jumping out there.
24:15Because those three alone, I'm finding very difficult.
24:18It's funny because I think wrongly of John Collins, but I could see him in central midfield
24:25If I was picking my left winger, I would go with David Cooper because I think he was outstanding.
24:31Not of my era, but actually somebody that I've watched enough clips of to go, my goodness,
24:37you would have been a tremendous addition to the current Scotland's set-up. You just
24:41have to talk to people who watched him. They speak very fondly of him. That's probably
24:48where I would go. I also like my wingers to be very across the ball and actually whip
24:54that ball. That's where I would go. But I'm not the manager.
25:00A Brazilian in a Scotsman's body, I think, describes David Cooper as...
25:05How many are described like that?
25:07Not many Scots.
25:08But I've got a feeling Pat's going to go somewhere else.
25:12No, it's extraordinarily tough. Names keep on absolutely jumping into my mind.
25:19And I think we can't ignore Fadi.
25:22Okay.
25:23Fadi is considered by many as a striker.
25:28Fadi would disagree with me. He would come through at Motherwell when I was there as
25:33I finished my career and as chief exec. Fadi was better running with people.
25:38He could do the job holding up and being a 10 and all that as well. Very, very good
25:42at that as well. But see Fadi with the ball in a wide area. He was extra, extra special
25:48as well. And maybe in another time, in another era, Fadi would have been stuck out there.
25:54He wouldn't have moved more central. He went there particularly when he was at Everton.
25:58It's also given Scotland fans of a certain generation one of their greatest ever moments
26:04which can't be discounted either when you're so iconic.
26:08I'm all over the place for this one, I have to say. I almost want three of us to have
26:14a vote on it. They're so different.
26:17They are different. I suppose it's what you're looking for from your left winger in such
26:21a game. Was McFadden more mercurial than Cooper?
26:26At the moment, in all seriousness, if it was during my career, I would give it to Cooper
26:34probably because I've got an attack mind inside. John Collins was probably my favourite player
26:38I played with in my Scotland career. My favourite to play with. That's how highly I rated John.
26:44But I'm going to give it to Fadi.
26:47I like that, I like that. As you say Mark, he really was another Tartan Army totem figure
26:55wasn't he? He really gave Scotland fans of a certain age to cling on to and gave such
27:01excitement. The goal against France...
27:05Hold as well, the goal against Holland as well.
27:07Yes, absolutely, absolutely.
27:09Let's not talk about second leg.
27:10It didn't go so well in the second leg. A great solo goal, I remember at Hamden against
27:15Macedonia, one of the great goals ran from his halfway line I think.
27:21His numbers are great, they're fine.
27:23Absolutely, absolutely. We talked earlier, we like that Scottish, we went missing one night
27:31didn't we, on the Scotland tour?
27:33After a night out in Hong Kong. I think that quite appeals to the Tartan Army as well.
27:37We have that dash of devilment as we mentioned earlier.
27:42It's interesting that he, there's an era, almost like a no man's land for Scotland,
27:48the Scotland national team. We talked with Darren Fletcher, he was part of that one.
27:53I wondered if anybody from that era would actually trouble the team because it's actually
27:58a maligned era, we didn't achieve very much. It speaks volumes for James McFadden that
28:04he was in such a difficult time for Scotland yet...
28:10I think you've nailed that and that's in my thinking as well. You can't choose when you
28:16were born, you can't choose when you were playing. Sometimes you just find yourself
28:22in the wrong systems. I played for Scotland and we played 3-5-2, there was no winger.
28:29Thanks, I'm not going to get many games. Because you think, unless you play me up front,
28:34and as we'll get to in a moment, we've had a few good strikers over the years.
28:39I'll be honest with you, these have all been hard, but I think leaving Paul McStay out
28:47and leaving John Collins and Koops, I think they've hurt me more than anything else in this.
28:55Those three have really hurt. They're on the bench, but they've hurt.
28:59I think it would be interesting to see if you put 10 people in and asked them, and I think
29:03you'd find there would be more people with McStay and Collins, but that doesn't make it
29:09the wrong call far from it.
29:10And they're mates of mine, and they're people I've played with, so it's not a bias in any way whatsoever.
29:15You just think, what do I need for this team?
29:18They'll have a big bench, Pat.
29:20It just needs to be.
29:21So, we talked about embarrassment of riches in the last four positions, maybe even the
29:26last nine positions we talked about, but Scotland fans of a certain generation, in particular
29:31my generation, will look at the next two positions, the Strikers, and go, where do we start?
29:36There's so few options, but actually when you go back further, there are plenty.
29:42I wonder though, was this perhaps the easier decisions to make in terms of who to be your front two?
29:47Upsettingly, yes. It is easy, and I think some of our watchers and listeners will be ahead of us
29:53slightly here.
29:54Look, I can remember, I prefer being sent forward, but I'm playing, and I've got Brian
30:01McClure, and I've got Coystie, and I've got Morris Johnson.
30:07I could actually just go on for ten minutes probably.
30:10We had a number of Strikers for a long period there, and before it.
30:15You go to Joe Jordan, totally iconic as well.
30:19You mentioned earlier Paul Sturrock, I don't know, we didn't mention him in talking about
30:23wingers, but where would Paul Sturrock feature as possibly could have been a Striker?
30:28Paul Sturrock, had it not for one specific individual, would have got an awful lot of
30:35caps for Scotland, and there was a period at the time with Dundee United where I thought
30:39he was really pushing on towards world class, which is amazing because another player who
30:46not thought of him in those terms because he'd never played for the old firm and all
30:49that sort of stuff, but in actual fact for the technical player that he was, and consider
30:55his real genius was he'd get the ball slightly deep almost to the ten, and turn on it, and
31:01dummy, and those days they'd just come right through him, and he got that time and time
31:06and time again, but he got up, he got on with it.
31:10Another player I think, if you're from Dundee, you get it, because you've watched it all
31:15the time, but out with that I don't know if people knew how brilliant he was, I really
31:21do think he was a brilliant, brilliant player.
31:23I think the fact that he featured at recent BBC series of programmes, sort of cult heroes
31:28I think, or icons, or cult heroes, but you know, Paul Sturrock was one of those and you
31:32think yeah, he possibly was a cult hero, but possibly should be more because he did obviously
31:40play, got to the European Cup semi-final, did so well with Dundee United, but yeah,
31:46might have benefited from going elsewhere, but yeah, Jim McLean wouldn't let him, would
31:51he?
31:52Exactly, and I nearly fell into that one myself, because I nearly said he was for Dundee United
31:55when I was younger!
31:56You'd still be there now!
31:58But he's a beautiful player, brave, not hugely tall, but sadly there was a player in the
32:05same position as him, who was maybe a wee bit better!
32:09That's just the upsetting situation!
32:11And that man would be?
32:12Oh, come on, Kenny.
32:13Kenny, you know Kenny.
32:14And of course, the joy of Kenny, if you, I mean basically if we were through this and
32:19I didn't put Kenny on the team, you wouldn't show this!
32:24Because he wouldn't go out!
32:25Right, and rightly so, but if you looked at me, again, there's no bias, because there
32:33is no bias, but I watched him break into the Celtic team, I used to go and watch him
32:37play in the reserves, just before he got through, and then just thinking, wow, the stuff he
32:43used to do there!
32:45And it was amazing, the time at Celtic was amazing, he gets the 100 caps for Scotland,
32:51then he goes to Liverpool, changes as a player, technically changed, what I found, I found
32:58him a more exciting player at Celtic than he was at Liverpool.
33:02Did he have more restrictions at Liverpool?
33:04Why was that?
33:05Because he's super intelligent, and he got rid of the edges a wee bit, and just done
33:12the right things all the time.
33:14Whereas I like the edges, you know the faddy edges, where you'll do something a bit daft?
33:19Nah, no, Kenny did everything right.
33:22If there's a ball on, you'll find it.
33:24He's creating for you, he's scoring for you, he's controlling everything.
33:29There was, honestly, a backside that's never been seen since, well, until John McGinn.
33:35And it was true.
33:37That trick that John's got, that's just one of Kenny's.
33:41He had a whole bunch of others as well.
33:43Left and right foot.
33:45You could tell your stories all day, but I mean, Kenny, the day he scored the winner
33:50as player manager at Liverpool to win the league, I was quite in a miff because I was
33:57only 10 yards away at the time.
33:59Because I was trying to get back to Zagreb, because we were playing down at Stamford Bridge
34:02for Chelsea.
34:03And you remember things like the European Cup winner's goal, the dink.
34:07To have that well with all, in the biggest moment, in a terrible game, with all the pressure
34:13on, and I'm going to dink.
34:16Beautiful.
34:17You go through the career, the numbers, everything, there is no argument at all.
34:21And really sort of relayed the joy of football, I think.
34:24You talk about that goal against Bruges in the 1978 European Cup final, wasn't it?
34:29Even the way he celebrated it, didn't he?
34:31He ran off and jumped over the hoardings at Wembley and just absolutely radiated joy,
34:36the joy of football.
34:38And for someone like myself, very much my era, a young seven, eight-year-old getting
34:43into football, I have to say Kendall Leash was the reason I'm sitting here, probably,
34:47because he made me fall in love with football.
34:49And he is, in fact, he was the first, he scored the first goal I saw with my own eyes.
34:56Anfield, I was taken down to Anfield for a treat to see Liverpool against West Bromwich
35:01Albion, 1982, April 1982.
35:04And he scored the winner and I won the win for Liverpool.
35:07Sticks with you.
35:08Yeah, absolutely sticks with you.
35:10And just a wonderful player and I'm glad to say number one.
35:15I don't think there's much debate, is there?
35:17No.
35:18The complete package that we have.
35:20You talked earlier about how some players, you can only just have careers when it's finished.
35:25Would anyone from Scotland get close to what Kenny has achieved in terms of his numbers,
35:30his style of play, his reputation, his iconic nature?
35:35It's hard to see anyone getting close.
35:37It's really bordering on impossible.
35:39I remember, he used to be sometimes a little bit midfieldy in his early days,
35:44but he could be wide midfield, he could be tent, which he was best at.
35:48Striker, absolutely no problem at all.
35:50Every part of it, he would not only play one version of that,
35:54he would play three or four different versions of that.
35:56And you just thought, ugh, really?
35:59Is there anything you can't do?
36:00There was a period of time, I remember watching a period of time,
36:03particularly the early days at Celtic, but he did the same at Liverpool.
36:05He used to score the same goal.
36:07Remember the one against Spain?
36:09The one where he slew into the corner.
36:12Celtic fans are going...
36:14Yeah, we watch it every week.
36:16And he did it every week.
36:18Now you look at it now, and you see that goal scored quite a lot now.
36:21Particularly in the English Premier League, there's a lot of players.
36:25They'll score maybe one or two, unless they're Mo Salah.
36:28One or two a season.
36:29Kenny was bringing them in all over the place all the time.
36:32On the touchline, I remember I gave him a goal against Belgium,
36:35it was a lovely goal.
36:36He danced along the byline, in the top corner.
36:40Yeah, just an absolutely extraordinary child.
36:44It takes nothing away from the fact that,
36:46and then add what he did afterwards.
36:48Yeah.
36:49I mean, you talk about the player-manager thing, goodness.
36:52Coming into a really difficult time at Liverpool,
36:55and to become player-manager,
36:57and winning the double, I think it was, wasn't it?
36:591966, with that goal you mentioned against Danford Bridge.
37:03I think he chested it down and volleyed it in, didn't he?
37:05That was Royal Rovers.
37:07Everything about his career, he has got the perfect Royal Rovers career.
37:11You just sit there.
37:12I'm at his 100th cap I've played.
37:16And this is the weird bit.
37:17So somebody you've sat and watched as a kid,
37:19and you're amazed by it, and you think it's amazing,
37:21you're fantastic, you're learning so much off him,
37:23and then suddenly,
37:24alright, I've got the ball, where's Kenny?
37:27And we all gave the ball to Kenny that night,
37:30because he needed one more goal to be Scotland's outright top goalscorer.
37:35And he never got the goal that night.
37:37Kenny was near the end of his career,
37:39and we'd done everything to get him a goal that night.
37:42It was a 3-0 win, I think.
37:44I think it was Franz Beckenbauer was in the crowd.
37:46That's right.
37:47He presented Kenny with an award for his 100th cap, wasn't it?
37:51Wearing a long brown trench coat, I remember, Franz Beckenbauer.
37:54Yeah, I still remember, they've got the poster,
37:56had the poster up.
37:58I don't know if it's in my mind, it was my first game,
38:00I was in my debut that day.
38:01It was your debut.
38:02Yeah, it was my debut that day.
38:04It's a wonderful, wonderful thing.
38:06Honestly, we could go on forever and ever about Kenny,
38:08but all he'd done afterwards.
38:10I was 10 yards away from him when he chucked it at Liverpool.
38:14I was playing in that game, Everton against Liverpool.
38:174-4.
38:18And the shock of everyone in the game is,
38:21it can't happen, Kenny can't go away.
38:24And it was extraordinary.
38:27Programs have been done, books have been written about Kenny,
38:30and rightly so, and he is officially number one pick in this team.
38:36Undisputed.
38:37But still needs some more.
38:39I say, could we just go with 10 and let him go on his own?
38:42No, we need another one in there.
38:45I mean, not many candidates from my era to even get close to that.
38:50I'm wondering, does Joe Jordan get in there?
38:54The number nine, you're looking for the number nine, aren't you?
38:58The only one I could think of that would maybe come close from guys that I watch
39:01would be someone like Ali McCoy, but I think Joe Jordan probably would be ahead of him.
39:06But we'll see what we draw on.
39:08Even Kenny Miller perhaps deserves a mention.
39:11You think about his stats, 69 caps for Kenny,
39:18and I think it was 19 goals, 18 goals.
39:21Again, not a stellar Scotland team, but he scored against some stellar sides.
39:26Germany, Italy, a great goal against England at Wembley.
39:29It's funny, the stats, they're great stats for a Scotland striker.
39:34It's just not somebody that I could elevate anywhere close to the guys that I've mentioned.
39:39And that's really unfair because Kenny was such a hard-working forward.
39:42He played in games where he got no service.
39:46He was always there, and look at his playing career.
39:49Very, very strong.
39:50But for me, I wouldn't have him.
39:53Despite being a very good striker, I would keep getting goals.
39:56Yeah, you're right.
39:57The recent year, we've been discussing it long and hard the last few weeks,
40:02haven't we, in terms of Scotland going to Germany, striker.
40:05What would we do to have a Marcus Rashford,
40:08who's been considered surplus to requirements by Gareth Southgate at England?
40:12It just shows that we're not quite of the standard.
40:15It's been a problem for a while.
40:18Hardest job in the world.
40:19Scoring a goal at an international level, I would suggest.
40:23You'll find a lot of these players, if you look through this list,
40:26you'll be surprised how few of them have got double figures.
40:30Very, very few Scotland players.
40:32Which is what makes Kenny Miller's achievement so impressive.
40:35Absolutely.
40:36Emo Johnson, 14 goals in 38 games.
40:40But wow, what a player.
40:42Is he close to your team?
40:44Yeah, actually, yeah.
40:46Played with him.
40:48We played against each other when we were 10.
40:51We played for the school's association when we were 10.
40:54Went all through the career.
40:56Ended up together again at Everton and with Scotland as well.
41:00Emo's work ethic.
41:02He's got a great overhead kick at that ball.
41:04I can't remember who he was against.
41:06Great overhead kick for Scotland.
41:08Somebody would have been shouting at me just now.
41:10But no, Emo was fabulous at that.
41:14Him and Jockey, Brian McClare, were great together.
41:17Let's not ignore Charlie.
41:19Charlie Knick.
41:20Charlie, top 50.
41:21Did make a top 50.
41:22Again, what a wonderful player.
41:24You mentioned earlier, I think, players perhaps in different eras.
41:29They struggle to...
41:32The team they're playing with perhaps doesn't go with their qualities.
41:37Charlie Nicholas had that great decision to go to Liverpool or Arsenal
41:41at the time when he was scoring so many goals at Celtic.
41:44Chose Arsenal.
41:45A lot of people were thinking, if he'd gone to Liverpool,
41:47that might have been the wise choice.
41:49Playing with Kenny, possibly.
41:51And the new Kenny.
41:52He was seen as the next one to take over from Kenny.
41:55Which is a big call and a big ask.
41:57But hey, Charlie did well down there.
41:59We actually went down the same week.
42:01He went to Arsenal the same week as I went to Chelsea.
42:03It was weird because he took all the publicity.
42:05I'm going, yeah, you haven't, mate.
42:07But no, a really good player.
42:10We didn't have the same tastes, I don't believe, at the time.
42:15I think he was at nightclubs more.
42:17But hey, Charlie was a big character.
42:19And a big character in the squads we were in as well.
42:23But, you know, look, he's up against...
42:26In a way, he's up against Kenny.
42:28Because he's, you know, one off a striker.
42:31I mean, there's lots of mad...
42:33It feels as if you're dissing...
42:35You give no respect to certain guys
42:38who have been astonishing players for Scotland over the years.
42:42It really isn't that.
42:44But I'm afraid...
42:46Everyone's ahead of us.
42:48Aren't they? Come on.
42:50There can't be an...
42:52Yes, there can be an argument, but...
42:54Oh, you've got to...
42:56Yeah, well, that is the...
42:59For younger people out there, Dennis Law.
43:02Right.
43:05Right at the end of his time for this period.
43:07Yes, of course.
43:08I grant you, yes.
43:10I think it's only just squeezed in as well.
43:12It was maybe the last year of his Scotland career.
43:15He was 74.
43:17Yeah, I mean, look, an incredible forward.
43:19Incredible striker.
43:21What makes him stand out
43:23above guys that we've just talked about?
43:25Well, the younger people, I'd just say,
43:27have a look at his numbers.
43:29When he was playing.
43:31At the top level.
43:32The players he was playing with,
43:34he was up there with the best in the world
43:36at that time.
43:38You know, with Manchester United,
43:39then Man City afterwards,
43:40but Manchester United.
43:41It was extraordinary, his numbers.
43:43When he goes over to Italy,
43:46I don't think he was very happy over there.
43:48It didn't last a long time.
43:50But in all seriousness,
43:52sniffers of goals,
43:54I just saw a very late period of his career.
43:58There's an old phrase,
44:00we've never had a better national goal scorer.
44:02That's it.
44:03And I don't know if we've had a...
44:05In fact, I'll rephrase that.
44:06We've never had a better national goal scorer.
44:08Period.
44:09Now, maybe before that,
44:11maybe way back to the 30s,
44:13the 40s, the 50s, whatever.
44:15I didn't see them.
44:16I don't know.
44:17We've never had a more natural goal scorer than Dennis.
44:20Would you try and argue that?
44:22Was there anyone who'd come close?
44:24Coistad was a brilliant goal scorer.
44:26Ali McCoistad is the name I would throw up
44:30in terms of national goal scorer.
44:33Knowing where to be.
44:34Yeah, absolutely.
44:3661 caps, 19 goals.
44:38I think I might have seen the last striker
44:39to score in a major finals.
44:40In Switzerland?
44:41For Scotland, yeah.
44:42Well, there we go.
44:44Wrong game for us.
44:46Difficult to argue, obviously, with Dennis Law.
44:49Played three times in 1974,
44:52so kind of sneaks in.
44:53Sneaks in.
44:54He was taken to the World Cup by Willie Ormond, I think.
44:57Perhaps, I don't know,
44:59was that sort of an emotional decision,
45:02thinking perhaps that he deserved to go to the World Cup?
45:04I think you need the wild cards.
45:05And we've got wild cards this year.
45:07And we need wild cards now and again
45:09that, alright, we're stuffed.
45:11There's 25 minutes to go.
45:12Who's going to create our scoring goal first?
45:15And I mean, at that point as well,
45:17even his career probably on a downward trajectory,
45:20he still knew he had it.
45:22He's got it in his locker.
45:23It's not something a striker loses
45:25in an act to score goals.
45:26And as you say, there's so few.
45:28And that's a real lament of mine.
45:30Like when we talk about
45:32Kenny Dalglish and Dennis Law,
45:34and we're talking about
45:36maybe a 20, 30-year period
45:38where we've just not had anything like that
45:40in the four areas.
45:41And that's ultimately what quite often
45:43separates the top international teams
45:46from the good international teams.
45:47There have been teams that
45:49have not necessarily had that.
45:51I mean, I particularly like Shea Adams.
45:53Shea's numbers are not great
45:55and people look at his numbers,
45:56you know, not as in wonderful, right?
45:59But if I was playing now,
46:01I'd want to play behind him
46:03because he's creating everything for me.
46:05He's creating space.
46:06He's dragging people away.
46:07He's, you will get more goals
46:09if you're John McGinn
46:10if Shea Adams is in front of you.
46:11He works the centre-halves harder.
46:13Works them harder, draws space,
46:15intelligent runs,
46:16and will play you in as well.
46:18Very, very badly underrated
46:21by a lot of people
46:22just because the numbers.
46:24We want somebody who scores loads of goals.
46:26But in actual fact,
46:27the guys behind him,
46:28just ask any of them.
46:29They'll love him.
46:30Lawrence, we were just down there.
46:31Lawrence Shanklin to Pat.
46:32Obviously, talk about numbers,
46:33talk about natural goal scorers.
46:35Perhaps Lawrence has learned
46:37to become a natural goal scorer.
46:39I don't think he probably was
46:40at the start of his career,
46:41but it really does look like
46:42somebody who can take chances
46:45all around the box now.
46:47A lot of them are debating
46:48whether they should start
46:49against Germany.
46:50Tough one.
46:51Tough one.
46:52I would just go with
46:53Clarke's thoughts on it.
46:54Really.
46:55If he started,
46:56I would say, yeah, good.
46:57Fine with that.
46:58I actually think
46:59it's particularly difficult
47:01for a scorer,
47:03a striker scorer.
47:04He's got more of his game now.
47:05That other side of his game
47:06has worked well.
47:07But if you're a striker scorer,
47:08you will be judged
47:09if you score against Germany, right?
47:11You've got the best defender
47:13in the world marking you.
47:14Rudiger's the best defender.
47:16I'm not saying
47:17he's the best player.
47:18He's not the best player.
47:19He's the best marker
47:20there is in world football.
47:21And he's been for a long time.
47:23Watched him for years
47:24and years and years.
47:25The ball and the player
47:27never go by him.
47:28Ever, ever, ever, ever.
47:30It doesn't matter who you are.
47:31So it's going to be tough.
47:33Maybe it's better
47:34to have somebody
47:35who runs them,
47:36runs them, runs them,
47:37runs the lines,
47:38drags them away,
47:39pulls them away
47:40to allow that space.
47:41So people are saying
47:43start Lawrence.
47:44And I actually think
47:45maybe he's not the right one
47:47to start there.
47:48Maybe you need somebody
47:49to pull the Rudiger's
47:50away from him.
47:51It's no coincidence
47:53that Scotland's goals
47:55don't come from the forward line.
47:56That's right.
47:57And if we take away our 11,
48:00because this 11 is going to win
48:01the Euros.
48:02It's not just going to beat Germany.
48:03It's going to take the tournament.
48:05But when you actually look
48:06at how Scotland
48:07do get their goals,
48:08guys like Scott McTominay,
48:09John McGinn
48:10breaking into space,
48:11finding that.
48:13Shea Adams is a very
48:14underrated player.
48:15You look at the forwards,
48:16Shea Adams has moved
48:17for a lot of money.
48:18He's well regarded
48:20by clubs in England.
48:21He's out of contract.
48:22People will be looking at him
48:23because of those qualities
48:24that are different
48:25than what he offers.
48:26I've worked with players
48:27like that over the years.
48:28Like that.
48:29Their numbers aren't great.
48:31And I'm pleading with them
48:32to be in.
48:33I'm not saying it to the manager
48:34but I'm saying
48:35please play him this week.
48:36You know.
48:37And guys that wouldn't
48:38be very well known.
48:39If he's playing,
48:40I get space.
48:41My life gets much,
48:42much better.
48:43And this is coming back
48:44to the one thing
48:45that's away from players
48:46here as well.
48:47The coach has figured this in.
48:50Clarke has figured it.
48:52He's got so many good things
48:54that he's sussed
48:55what this team needs.
48:57And sometimes we
48:58raise our eyebrows
48:59and go,
49:00surely Shanklin scored
49:01or what are you doing
49:02doing that?
49:03And it's very rarely,
49:05maybe only one or two times,
49:07I've thought,
49:08I'm not sure about that one,
49:09Clarke.
49:10And usually it turns out
49:11he was right after all.
49:12But all managers
49:13make mistakes.
49:14All coaches make mistakes.
49:15The stuff that he's come out with,
49:17we take it for granted now.
49:18Yeah, absolutely.
49:19The whole Tierney-Robertson thing.
49:21To work that out.
49:23And now it looks
49:24the most natural thing
49:25in the world, doesn't it?
49:26And then when we're in trouble,
49:27them two go and fly up.
49:29And they've destroyed
49:30teams on their own
49:31because we have got that option.
49:33I was saying to a few people,
49:35I think what we need
49:36over in Germany
49:37is we need a pitch on a slant
49:39going down towards the left
49:40so the ball goes out left
49:41for us all the time.
49:42Because that's where
49:43we are unbelievably
49:44strongly created.
49:45And would you be comfortable,
49:47Steve,
49:48managing your 11,
49:50your Scotland 11
49:51for the last 50 years?
49:52I think you would be.
49:53I think Steve would be
49:54a good manager for that.
49:55Funnily enough,
49:56you need somebody
49:57who's absolutely respected, right?
49:59We've had some good
50:00Scotland managers over the years.
50:02And with Jock and Sir Alec,
50:05they're the best.
50:06With Jock and Sir Alec,
50:07they're the best in the business.
50:09And they absolutely
50:10were the best in the business.
50:11So, you know,
50:12you're talking,
50:13this is Ancelotti stuff.
50:14This is way up there
50:15in the world standards.
50:16So we've been lucky
50:17in that sphere.
50:18And Clarkie wouldn't
50:19do a bad job at all.
50:20He would love that.
50:23Well, Pat,
50:24that's quite a team,
50:25quite a job you've had
50:26in creating it.
50:27I hope you've had fun.
50:28I had fun
50:29and I look forward
50:30to the abuse
50:31or more importantly,
50:32the discussion
50:33and the debate.
50:34And to be honest,
50:36I was willing
50:37to be talked round
50:38on some stuff.
50:39And like you said,
50:40right at the top,
50:41ask me again tomorrow
50:42and one or two
50:43of them might change.
50:44Yeah, absolutely.
50:45And it does change,
50:46doesn't it?
50:47And what's your favourite album?
50:49What's your favourite album?
50:51Today?
50:52I'll go back to
50:53Closive by Joy Division today.
50:55But it could be
50:56something else tomorrow.
50:57Perfect.
50:58Well, Pat,
50:59thank you so much
51:00for joining us.
51:01It's been great
51:02to have you on.
51:03Thank you all
51:04for coming to the
51:05Scotsman Football Show.
51:06As you know,
51:07Euros are right upon us
51:08and we hope you're going
51:09to stay with the Scotsman
51:10every step of the way.
51:11We'll have the best coverage.
51:12Alan heading over to Germany
51:13to cover
51:14certainly the first
51:15three group matches
51:16and hopefully a few more
51:17will be on.
51:18From myself,
51:19Pat and Alan,
51:20it's goodbye for now.
51:21Thank you.
51:34.

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