You are Scotland boss Clarke… what would you do?

How would you set Scotland up against Greece?
- Published
Nations League play-off, second leg: Scotland v Greece (agg 1-0)
Venue: Hampden Park, Glasgow Date: Sunday, 23 March Kick-off: 17:00 GMT
Coverage: Watch on BBC Scotland, BBC Two Scotland & iPlayer; listen on BBC Radio Scotland & Sounds; live text coverage & in-play clips on the BBC Sport website & app
Scotland have the advantage against Greece after securing a 1-0 away win on Thursday and are on course to keep their place in Nations League A.
Steve Clarke's side are the hosts on Sunday and the head coach has Ryan Christie available after the midfielder was suspended for the first leg.
Greece are looking to replace the Scots in League A after finishing runners-up in their League B group but having only been edged out on goal difference by England.
With stakes so high and if you were in Clarke shoes, what would your approach be?
You can select your XI, map out your tactics and deliver the pre-match team talk below...
- Published21 March
- Published20 March
Choose your XI and your formation?
Forward George Hirst made his Scotland debut as a late substitute in Piraeus while Kieran Tierney made his first international appearance since Euro 2024, also as a replacement.
Teenagers Lennon Miller and James Wilson are still waiting to make their Scotland bow after being named on the bench for the first leg.
For Thursday's win, Clarke adopted a 4-5-1 formation with Che Adams leading the line until Hirst's introduction.
The returning Lewis Ferguson, penalty scorer Scott McTominay and John McGinn were Adams' principle support, with Billy Gilmour and Kenny McLean anchoring the midfield.
Grant Hanley was a standout in defence, alongside John Souttar and full-backs Anthony Ralston and Andy Robertson in front of veteran goalkeeper Craig Gordon.
So, same again, or is it time to change things up?
Pick your Scotland XI
Pick your Scotland XI for the Nations League match against Greece.What would your team talk be?
You've chosen your line-up. Now it's all down to the players.
Before they go out on to the pitch, you've got a few moments left to deliver one last message.
Is there a particular instruction you'd like to give? Or is it time to deliver a final rallying call?