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Scotland manager McLeish set to draft in some familiar faces for Hungary match

After Friday’s 1-0 Hampden defeat to Costa Rica, Scotland manager Alex McLeish is ready to select more experienced players against Hungary tonight
After Friday’s 1-0 Hampden defeat to Costa Rica, Scotland manager Alex McLeish is ready to select more experienced players against Hungary tonight

Scotland manager Alex McLeish will pick a more experienced team in his second match back in charge.

McLeish handed out five debuts – four of them from the start – during a 1-0 Hampden defeat by Costa Rica on Friday night.

There will be a shift in focus for Tuesday’s friendly against Hungary, although two of the experienced players who did start, Grant Hanley and Matt Ritchie, have pulled out along with Manchester United midfielder Scott McTominay.

“It will be a more experienced team,” said McLeish, who could call on the likes of Celtic players Stuart Armstrong, James Forrest and Callum McGregor.

“A lot of players will play who have had caps before and experienced the international arena. That will be more evident.”

McLeish conceded defeat on Friday had made a positive result in Budapest even more desirable.

“But again, I’m still looking at performance level,” he added. “We want to try to get a good result with a good performance. That gives the players evidence that they are on the track to go where we want to go.”

McLeish is adamant his team were not far from that path after half-time against World Cup-bound Costa Rica.

“There was nothing missing in the second half, only finishing,” he said. “That has to be better. But we looked back and we had five or six chances – decent ones, not half-chances.

“With a little bit more aggression we could have scored a couple of goals. At first there were some teething problems, the fact we are trying to gel. A lot were playing with their team-mates for the first time.

“But we found our feet and we started the second half at a really great level, which was much more like what we were looking for.

“It will be hard to go for 90 minutes at that kind of tempo but we certainly want to be on the front foot.”

McLeish introduced a 3-4-3 formation on Friday, a departure on the 4-2-3-1 system generally favoured by his predecessor, Gordon Strachan.

The tactics worked better in the second half when Scotland started to press the ball better and got on the front foot, and McLeish will continue trying to instil some flexibility into his team’s shape.

“We have learned some things and we can try different players if it’s the same formation, or a four at the back, then we have those options as well,” the former Aberdeen and Scotland defender said.

“We are short of right-sided defenders, Grant Hanley is away back and Russell Martin never made it. We have a dearth of right-footers and loads of lefties. There’s a chance it will be the same system but we will look at others.

“We want to be flexible, we have to be ready to change tactics at any given moment.

“I want to get the players used to playing in different formations and different styles.”