ALEX McLeish believes he has fulfilled his destiny by taking charge of Scotland for a second time.

The 59-year-old, who was manager of the national team for 10 games back in 2007, was paraded at Hampden yesterday after signing a two year contract.

Many members of the Tartan Army are unimpressed that McLeish, who joined Birmingham City after failing to reach the Euro 2008 finals, has replaced Gordon Strachan.

Read more: Tam McManus: Critics are wrong, Alex McLeish will bring back glory days

However, the Scotland great, who won 77 caps between 1980 and 1993 and played in three World Cup finals, has vowed to win them over by leading his country to Euro 2020.

“The opportunity arose and I felt I had to go for it,” he said. “I believed it was my destiny.

“Michael (O’Neill) was the first choice, let’s not make any bones about that. But I have always felt I was the right guy to be the next Scotland coach. Honestly, I felt it was fate. It was meant to happen.

“I believe I’m the right man and you have to believe in yourself. I just feel it’s the right time for me. I feel I’m a better manager now. The common sense factor grows in you and you see things from a different way.

“Since I left to go to England in 2007, it’s been a lot of fire-fighting. But I had quite a lot of success in those years and I’ve got a lot of experience.”

McLeish admitted that he could understand why some Scotland supporters were against him being brought on board, but insisted he could get them behind him.

Read more: Alex McLeish on his Scotland return, Scott Brown staying on, reaching Euro 2020 and Sir Alex Ferguson's backing​

“It’s up to me to try to get the guys onside,” he said. “If they are a wee bit reticent at first, then I just have to get performance levels from the team which are exciting for them. The bottom line is getting the right results.

“Listen, of course I can understand it. Not everyone is going to be happy no matter what happens. You get divided opinion. The only way to change it is by performing well and getting good results. That is the cure for dissent.”

McLeish, whose first game will be a friendly against Costa Rica next month, will announce his assistants next week, but Peter Grant, who he worked with at Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest, and James McFadden, who played under him at Birmingham City and with Scotland, are being tipped to join his backroom team.