SCOTLAND manager Steve Clarke has penned an open letter to the Tartan Army, on what would have been the date of the national team's crucial EURO 2020 play-off against Israel.
Like many supporters, Clarke admitted that he was disappointed not to be leading his players out at Hampden this evening but pointed out that "the world has changed ... and football, rightly, has had to take a step back".
In his letter, the former Kilmarnock boss called for solidarity as society grapples with the Covid-19 pandemic and urged the public to follow the advice of the First Minister and Chief Medical Officer to "stay home, save lives. Simple."
The statement from the national team manager can be read in full below.
"I think most of you, like me, will have woken-up this morning, looked at the date and wished the circumstances could have been very different.
"Thursday, March 26th had been circled in my wall planner from the moment I had the honour of becoming Scotland Head Coach. Truth be told, I had hoped we wouldn’t have needed the Nations League Play-Off route: I believed we could have finished higher than our eventual third place in the UEFA EURO 2020 qualification group.
"All those qualifying games seem far less important now, insignificant even, but this is the reality of the situation we find ourselves in.
"The world has changed in recent weeks and months and football, rightly, has had to take a step back as our government and our wonderful, brave and selfless NHS staff step-up their efforts to tackle a far greater opponent.
"This is a difficult letter to write because, as a father and grandfather there are far greater considerations in life right now and far greater responsibilities on all of us but, at the same time, I feel it important to recognise and show appreciation for the effort you all had gone to in ensuring our match against Israel would have been a sell-out.
"It would have been an incredibly proud night for me and the whole team and we would have given every ounce to be on that plane to Norway or Serbia.
"I know thousands of you had also booked onward travel, ever the optimists. By all accounts Budapest or Berlin would have been the unwitting hosts of Scotland fans awaiting connections to either Oslo or Belgrade.
"That sense of togetherness, loyalty and commitment is needed in our lives now, more than ever before. The First Minister and the Chief Medical Officer have been clear in outlining exactly what the nation must do to combat the virus that has become a global pandemic. I urge all of you to heed that advice: stay indoors, protect your family, and protect others. Stay home, save lives. Simple.
"Football is our national sport and its absence has had the same effect on me that it has had for every lover of the game in this country. The sooner we all take the advice on board to stay at home, the sooner we can get back to our own normality of midweek nights and weekend afternoons among friends, at our spiritual homes across the country.
"That is for later, as is our match against Israel, whenever the authorities consider it appropriate – and above all, safe – to resume football across the world.
"In the meantime, I will be thinking of you tonight and imagining what might have been and what could yet be.
"Stay healthy, stay safe, most importantly stay home."
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