How has world changed since Scotland were last at men's finals?

5 hours ago 3

B*Witched, Scottish Parliament and CeefaxImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

B*Witched were topping the charts, the Scottish Parliament wasn't open yet and Ceefax was behind the BBC's live text in 1998

ByAmy Canavan (born in 2000)

BBC Sport Scotland in Charlotte, North Carolina

When Scotland last reached a men's World Cup, the Scottish Parliament didn't exist, Google wasn't a thing and a pint of lager was roughly £1.90.

The first concerns around what Y2K would bring were creeping in.

C'est La Vie by B*witched was number one in the charts, The Wedding Singer was the best in the box office, and the BBC's written coverage for the opening game against Brazil was on Ceefax.

While the Tartan Army were healing their broken hearts with a 10p Freddo after Morocco spoiled the party in Saint-Etienne in France, little did they know they'd be waiting 28 years to see their country at a men's World Cup again.

1998 was a very long time ago. Too long ago. Eight of Steve Clarke's squad here in the US were not even born.

A whole generation and then some have been envious of their elders who have experienced their national team dining at the top table.

But while Scotland have been sitting in the footballing dark, doing their best to keep their memories of France fresh, the rest of the world has kept spinning. And then some...

Incredulous transfers and the largely absent internet

Back in a time where Tony Blair was calling 10 Downing Street home and Bill Clinton was kicking about in the White House, the world wasn't revolving around the internet.

Though it had been in existence for over a decade, it was largely used for work, not play. It's true potential - or danger - was lightyears away from being learned.

Craig Brown's line-up wasn't being predicted, leaked or discovered online, and there certainly wasn't anyone watching Colin Hendry and his team-mates trot out at the Stade de France in their kilts on their mobile phones.

That's an image, actually. Only one in four people back then actually had a mobile phone. Imagine the huddling...

In fact, most fans back home were watching in smoke-filled pubs - it was nearly eight years before it was made illegal to light up in enclosed public spaces.

They watched Hendry admirably attempt his unenviable job of marking a certain Ronaldo - the R9 vintage, not CR7 - the world's most expensive player at the time.

The Brazil striker just completed a £17m move from Barcelona to Inter Milan. At the time the fee was eye-watering, but now it might buy you a third-choice full-back.

Figure caption,

Who would McGinn like to see if victory on Saturday?

Who's this Federer fella?

The Euro didn't come into use until the year after.

And it was that year too that Scotland's first First Minister, Donald Dewar, proclaimed "today there is a new voice in the land," as the new parliament opened in Edinburgh.

There have been six First Ministers since, and one vote on independence in 2014.

Glasgow hosted the Commonwealth Games in the same year, two summers after London welcomed the world for the Olympics. Hampden hosted a few men's and women's football games during that one.

Including the 1998 title, won weeks before the jaunt to France, Celtic have won 21 Scottish top-flight titles since, that one in 98 - the Scottish Premier Division league title, as it was then called - ending nine years of dominance by Rangers.

Elsewhere in sport, a 22-year-old Tiger Woods was waltzing into the golfing world. He had just one major to his name - The Masters - but would go on to win a further 14.

Roger Federer hadn't even made his ATP debut, never mind won any of his 103 singles titles - or his 20 Grand Slams - while Wimbledon's winner in '98, Pete Sampras, earned £43,500 more than women's winner, Jana Novotna.

Equal pay finally arrived in 2007 with last year's winners - Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek - both receiving £3m. Changed days.

Figure caption,

Thompson and McFadden go WILD for late Scotland goals!

The first in a lifetime for...

This Scotland squad will feel £3m and more having achieved what they just have. They might also have spent close to that amount on the celebrations...

But this is historic. The first for a generation and then some.

Aaron Hickey, Lewis Ferguson, Ben Gannon-Doak, Nathan Patterson, Anthony Ralston, Findlay Curtis and Tyler Fletcher were all born post-1998.

They grew up watching James McFadden, Darren Fletcher, Barry Ferguson, Scott Brown, Kenny Miller and many others in dark blue fail to reach the promised land.

It's taken over 10,000 days to do so.

There won't be CDs and DVDs to capture the backdrop of these finals, while the milk required for the tea and coffees won't cost 34p, either.

But, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Alexa, play We Have A Dream...

Read Entire Article
Industri | Energi | Artis | Global