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Euro 2020: Scotland feed off fervent atmosphere to stifle England’s plans at Wembley

Andrew Robertson and Kalvin Phillips battle for possession (Getty)
Andrew Robertson and Kalvin Phillips battle for possession (Getty)

After three seconds of this goalless draw, an airborne Lyndon Dykes cracked his knee into Luke Shaw's pelvis so hard the England left-back crumpled to the floor. Shaw had been picked for his "technical ability", Gareth Southgate explained before kick-off, but as he writhed on the ground under biblical rain, it was quickly clear England would have to fight before they earned the right to play.

It was a revealing moment forewarned by an atmosphere in the capital which had been brooding all day. Scots emerged from trains at Kings Cross Station in waves. Men in kilts captured all four corners Trafalgar Square and flooded Wembley Way. The dressing rooms are a walk from the pitch at Wembley but the players would have heard refrains of "Yes Sir, I Can Boogie" drift down the tunnel. Scotland started the week vowing to give it all they had, almost as if they were convincing themselves their tournament wasn't over. By a fervent kick-off, Ally McCoist declared he was ready to march on Carlisle.

John McGinn and Andrew Robertson both took an early opportunity to introduce themselves to Phil Foden with a crunch, but Scotland's aggression wasn't all mindless bludgeoning of the nearest opponent. The back five billowed up and down as England shifted possession across the pitch, their two wing-backs rushing to squeeze England's wide players, while in midfield Billy Gilmour sharpened his elbows to protect the ball and himself from Chelsea teammate Mason Mount's harrying.

What unfolded was not so much a flowing match but a game of snatched moments, instances which made you hold your breath and clench your fists and churned the stomach. John Stones hung in the air like a freezeframe and shuddered the post with a header. Che Adams' shot flew towards goal only to be cleared by Reece James on the line. Stephen O’Donnell’s volley was destined for the corner before a Jordan Pickford glove intercepted its trajectory.

As the match began to find some rhythm England found themselves with two significant problems. The first was through the middle: England's high press worked insomuch as it forced Scotland into direct balls forwards but Stones and Tyrone Mings stayed deep leaving a chasm between defense and midfield for Scotland's strikers, Dykes and Che Adams, to receive the ball and turn.

The second was on Scotland's flanks. Shaw and James weren't sure whether to run out and squeeze the advancing wing-backs or sit tight alongside their centre-backs. James had the added conundrum of Kieran Tierney whose occasional burst around the outside of Robertson went untracked, left-back layered upon left-back overloading the flank. Tierney's most dangerous moment found Scotland's right wing-back O'Donnell darting in from the other side and that perfectly timed volley.

England's best threats came via surges from midfield. James found Phil Foden and then Harry Kane in behind but both had strayed marginally offside. Mount and Kalvin Phillips made dangerous darts down the sides of Scotland's back three but gradually found the channels cut off. For all Southgate's planning, this was not a night for "technical ability". It said everything that, by most accounts, the standout performers were not the twinkle-toed Mount and Gilmour but battle-hardened centre-halves, Tyrone Mings and Grant Hanley.

That was, in part, Scotland’s triumph. It was not a victory, yet Steve Clarke succeeded with their efforts to smother and stifle, to embody the occasion, and ultimately to outplay their opponents when a football match broke out.

The game finished as it started, with blood and thunder. A royal rumble in the penalty box, bodies strewn, limbs flaying like a cartoon dust-up, until McGinn came and planted the ball into Wembley's highest tier, a souvenir for someone on a night when Scotland won the battle and England got a draw.

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