SCOTLAND will need to add to the World Cup goals scored by Claire Emslie and Lana Clelland if they are to have any chance of qualifying for the last 16 by beating Argentina at the Parc des Princes tomorrow night. The two strikes came too late to prevent 2-1 losses to England and Japan in the opening group games.

The lower ranked Argentinians are, almost perversely, a point better off in Group D despite having failed to score any. Their 0-0 draw with Japan got them off to a productive start, while their subsequent defeat to England, by 1-0, confirmed them to be a well-organised and disciplined side who are hard to break down.

Fiorentina striker Clelland could be in line for a very rare start. She wasn't selected in Nice, but came on for West Ham striker Jane Ross with 14 minutes remaining in Rennes and rewarded Kerr with a sweet left-footed shot from 25 yards.

“I just thought 'I'm hitting this',” the 26-year-old said at the team hotel in the French capital. “There was no pressure. It was 2-0 down. What was the worse thing that could happen?”

The confidence of the strike contrasted with Clelland's inability to convert a couple of straightforward chances in the second Euro 2017 group match against Portugal. She had been given a rare Scotland start by Anna Signeul because Ross was injured in the opener against England, but failed to grasp the opportunity and has remained the second, or even third, choice striker under Kerr.

Nevertheless, there is evidence that Clelland's switch from middling Serie A club UPC Tavagnacco to Fiorentina last July is paying off. She missed a number of Scotland's World Cup build-up games through injury, but also scored another well-taken goal against Iceland in January.

Last Saturday's strike made it two in three matches, a statistic which reads even better when it is factored in that she was only on the pitch for a total of 54 minutes.

Growing up playing with boys in Methven, Clelland graduated to Rangers and then Spartans before moving to the first of her three Italian clubs in 2014. She now speaks the language fluently, and loves life in Florence, but never dreamed that football could offer so many opportunities.

Asked if she had dreamed about scoring a goal in the World Cup when she was a small girl, she replied: “Never. Never thought it was possible. I'm a kid and I love football but the women's World Cup wasn't on TV and it wasn't out there. There wasn't anything to visualise.

“I didn't realise I could even play professionally. Obviously there were people like Kim [Little] who went down south, but for everyone it wasn't there.”

There was, Clelland says, also a shortage of role models for her to look up to, but Julie Fleeting, who scored a staggering 116 goals in 121 games for Scotland, was the exception. “I was part of the first ever Rangers Ladies team,” she pointed out.

“You're 15 years old. How are you supposed to look up to someone when you're in the same team as them? Julie was the only one in the spotlight, she was a Scotland striker. I used to go to games and she was always the standout.”

While the trend among current players is to seek a move to England, Clelland, with her spiky attitude, is perfectly happy not to have conformed. “I took a slightly different path from most of the other girls in the [Scotland] team and jumped at the chance of going abroad,” she explained.

“When I first went out to Italy the dream was maybe England. The league was growing so much and all the professional clubs, Chelsea, Man City, were coming in. If I look at the Italian league now – Juventus, Inter Milan, AC Milan, and Fiorentina where I'm at – it has grown so much in the last five years.

“It's a pleasure to be part of it. I'm quite a laidback, chilled-out person, so to live the life of the Italians suits me. I'm absolutely settled on and off the pitch. I love it – the coach, the girls, the team.”

Assuming Kerr continues to play a 4-2-3-1 formation, Clelland faces competition for the striker's role from Ross and Erin Cuthbert. The Chelsea striker has been the No.1 choice this year, but also drops back to No.10 on occasion.

Whoever is chosen will face an interesting goalkeeper in Vanini Correa. The Argentinian is 35 and the mother of twins, aged five. She played in the inaugural match of the 2007 World Cup and was on the wrong end of an 11-0 hammering from Germany.

That remained the highest scoreline in a World Cup until the USA beat Thailand 13-0 last week. Correa, who was persuaded by Argenina manager Carlos Borrello to come out of retirement in 2017, has kept clean sheets in both opening games.

Her performance against England was particularly notable, a penalty save from Nikita Parris being one of several fine stops. Phil Neville, the England head coach, said: “What you've seen tonight is an unbelievable goalkeeping performance.”