Scotland 3-3 Norway: Steve Clarke's side head for Euro 2024 after closing draw
- Published
Scotland's successful Euro 2024 qualifying campaign ended with a thrilling draw as Mohamed Elyounoussi's late equaliser earned Norway a point at Hampden.
Steve Clarke's side had already secured their place in Germany next summer but had to settle for second place in Group A, with Spain, as expected, overcoming Georgia to win the section.
The Scots twice came from behind in the first half, with sloppily-conceded goals scored by Aron Donnum and Jorgen Larsen cancelled out by John McGinn's penalty and Leo Ostigard's own goal.
Stuart Armstrong's strike looked to have earned another win in front of a jubilant Tartan Army, before former Celtic winger Elyounoussi capitalised on a wonderful, floated ball to level late on.
Scotland now await the Euro 2024 draw next month, for which they will be among the third pot of seeds.
With key players missing, this was an opportunity for squad players to impress. Scotland started with a back four but, with the likes of Kieran Tierney and Andy Robertson unavailable, they looked exposed, particularly in the first half.
Norway capitalised when the impressive Oscar Bobb caused havoc, Larsen outmuscled the defence and Donnum stroked home the loose ball via a deflection off Nathan Patterson and a post.
The response was swift in front of a party-mode Tartan Army, determined to celebrate their passage to Germany.
After McGinn was caught on the edge of the box, the free-kick was half-cleared but a follow-up shot struck Donnum's arm and McGinn netted his 18th international goal from the penalty spot.
His contribution has been overshadowed in this campaign by the exploits of Scott McTominay, but the ovation the Aston Villa midfielder received when substituted said it all as he moved to sixth on Scotland's all-time goalscoring list alongside Kenny Miller.
Scotland were caught again, though, when they failed to defend a ball from the right and Larsen nipped in front of the despairing Clark to bundle home. Again, the defending looked suspect.
To their credit, Clarke's side responded once again when Kenny MacLean flicked on McTominay's corner and the ball rebounded off Ostigard and over the line.
Scotland side exerted more control after half-time and Armstrong looked to have secured victory with a fine finish after an excellent exchange with McGinn.
Norway would not be denied though as Julian Ryerson's dink caught Clark out and Elyounoussi made sure with a neat back-post header to offer small consolation for their failure to qualify directly.
Player of the match - Oscar Bobb (Norway)
Room for improvement but time to celebrate - analysis
Qualification and the absence of key players presented the opportunity for some more peripheral Scotland figures to showcase their Euro 2024 credentials.
There seemed a real determination to sign off this campaign in style and that led to a game that was far more open than you'd expect.
Armstrong was one who stood out with a quality performance that showed his value. Jacob Brown struggled at times but increasingly got involved as his confidence grew. Whether that was enough we shall see.
Defensively, though, there were questions to answer. With Angus Gunn, Tierney, Robertson and Aaron Hickey all injured, Scotland looked exposed for both goals.
There's depth there but too many goals have been conceded of late, something that will undoubtedly be analysed going forward in terms of formation and personnel.
There's clearly room for improvement, but the bottom line is this has been a wonderful qualifying campaign with the hard work done early and qualification for back-to-back Euros secured in style.
The Hampden after-party was electric. This result didn't really matter. Scotland have delivered and can look forward to another major tournament with hope of making an impression.
What they said
Scotland head coach Steve Clarke: "I think you saw the first half was a little bit of a flat performance from the team - second half we played a little bit more like ourselves.
"This group of players have never qualified for a tournament this early. We have to learnt to turn up and win games.
"You are not looking for the fear of losing or dropping points and you have to find a different way to motivate the players so that is probably something me and the players have to work on.
"I think we need to go away, prepare well and be competitive. That is all we promise. We are going to go to Germany and try to do that next summer."
Scotland captain John McGinn: "The qualification campaign has been amazing. I'm just so proud of the way the boys have handled it.
"Tonight was a bit strange for everyone. I think the punters were a bit surprised we had actually qualified.
"We didn't start the game well, Norway deserved to go ahead at half-time, no doubt. We probably got away with one. Second half, we were much, much better and we feel a bit hard done by at the end."
Norway head coach Stale Solbakken: "Steve Clarke is a great coach with disciplined players. They don't pretend to be anything they're not. They'll be a handful for everyone, they can play two systems.
"There will be no easy games for those who're going to play Scotland [at next year's Euros in Germany]."
Match stats
Scotland have conceded twice or more in five consecutive internationals for the first time since a run of seven from May 1960 to April 1961.
Not since a 5-3 win over Wales in May 1969 had Scotland both scored and conceded three goals in a game.
Scotland have scored more than three goals in three (or more) different matches in a single qualifying campaign for the first time since doing so in Euro 2008 qualifying (also three matches).
After winning five consecutive matches across all competitions, Scotland have since failed to win any of their last five (D2 L3) - their longest winless run since March 2021 (D3 L2).
Donnum's goal (02:45) was both Norway's earliest goal scored and Scotland's earliest goal conceded in this campaign.
This was the first time Scotland both scored and conceded two or more goals in the first half of any match since September 2015, in a Euro qualifier against Germany.
Larsen has been directly involved in six goals in his last five appearances for Norway (3 goals, 3 assists); he had neither a goal nor an assist in his first six senior international appearances for the nation beforehand.