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Daily Record
Daily Record
Sport
Keith Jackson

The knives are out for Steve Clarke but the SFA can't make crazy Gordon Strachan mistake again - Keith Jackson

Dangerous times these for Steve Clarke.

Make no mistake, the knives have been out for Scotland’s manager over the last few days, ever since the final whistle on Wednesday night shut down his pathway into the World Cup Finals in Qatar.

Despite the fact that no other manager has been able to do it for decades, Clarke now stands accused of failing to deliver on his remit which makes him more vulnerable now than at any time over these last three years.

And at moments as delicate as this, often sound logic and solid reasoning can be lost among the stampede for change.

In fact, as ridiculous as it may seem after laying down irrefutable progress, Clarke will have his work cut out just keeping the mob at a safe distance now that they want someone else to step forward and take his place. Anyone else for that matter.

Just ask Gordon Strachan who had to pull the blade out from between his own shoulders five years ago after the SFA’s error prone chief executive Stewart Regan plunged it there following a near miss at qualification for Russia 2018.

The truth of the matter is, having personally led a steering group which gave the go ahead for a £33m sporting centre of excellence to be built on the outskirts of Edinburgh, Regan needed a manager in place who would agree to facilitate a switch of the national team’s HQ across the M8.

That Strachan resisted stubbornly against the idea of upping sticks for the Oriam on the basis of what he believed to be in the best interests of his players, was the real reason behind Regan’s decision to remove him from the Hampden hotseat.

But, typically, he only felt emboldened enough to do so on the back of another tournament that got away and just when Strachan’s position was the matter of considerable public debate.

This ill conceived parting of the ways was an underhanded act of opportunism masquerading as decisive leadership and it buffered Scotland’s international recovery completely off the tracks.

Strachan was escorted out of the building despite collating an impressive win percentage of 47.50 during his time in charge.

For the record, that’s the best set of numbers chalked up by any Scotland boss since Tommy Docherty won seven out of 12 games - and that was half a century ago.

Clarke’s own statistics also stand up to rigorous scrutiny. With a current win rate of 45.45 per cent, he and Strachan are comfortably the best performing Scotland managers this side of the Millennium with only the late, great Walter Smith coming close at 43.75.

Scotland's Jack Hendry (centre) appears dejected at the end of clash with Ukraine (PA)

Add to that the fact that just last summer he led the country to a first major finals since 1998 and it actually beggars belief that we’re even having this conversation in the first place.

And yet, since that crushing 3-1 defeat to Ukraine, Clarke hasn’t had to look very far to find someone else who thinks he could do the job better.

Over the weekend, former Scotland boss Craig Leven even waded in with both feet live on national radio when he questioned Clarke’s team selection and tactical awareness during Wednesday night’s no show in the playoffs.

This brutal critique was quite something, given that Leven got himself into such a horrible state during his own time at the helm that he actually forgot to play a striker for a game in Prague.

Levein might have pre-faced it all by talking up Clarke’s achievements in the role and insisting the manager has credit in the bank where his job security is concerned but by doling out such a withering assessment so publicly, he was also pouring a gallon of petrol onto the fire which lit up at the national stadium the other night

He was positively scathing over Clarke’s decision to deploy Scott McTominay, Grant Hanley and Liam Cooper as a three man defence insisting that none of them ought to have made it into the starting XI.

If it had been down to him, Levein would have opted instead to pair John Souttar and Scott McKenna at the heart of Scotland’s defence while also ripping up the bespoke formation which Clarke has fashioned in order to get Scotland this far.

Actually, there may be something in that as Clarke’s system was designed specifically to shoehorn Kieran Tierney and Andy Robertson in the same team so, in the event that one of them is not available to him, perhaps Clarke ought to be more flexible.

It’s entirely possible that he will roll something else out for the final three games of Scotland’s season even if it means opening himself up to accusations of fluffing his lines for the big one and locking the stable door after the horse has already bolted.

But Levein’s outspoken contribution was also indicative of the position Clarke finds himself in now that he’s left to pick up the pieces of a shattered campaign and head forward towards the inconveniences of Nations League matches against Armenia and the Republic of Ireland.

His every move is about to be placed under the microscope like never before and if he should fail to win any of these games then all the noise around him right now will soon become something of a clamour.

In this instance, Scotland ought to take a deep breath and be very careful what it wishes for.

To chase one good manager out of town may be regarded as a misfortune. To get rid of two of them in the space of five years would look an awful lot like carelessness.

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