Scotland's totems must turn up to thwart dynamic Morocco
Key takeaways
- The midfield head-to-head between Scott Mc Tominay and Ayyoub Bouaddi could be vital
- More like Beanotown, more like Scotland, Massachusetts.
- Boston has been overtaken by Ball Boys, full-time dreamers and relentless ambassadors for their country.
Why this matters: a sports story that could shift standings, legacies, or fan conversations.
The midfield head-to-head between Scott Mc Tominay and Ayyoub Bouaddi could be vital
BBC Scotland's chief sports writer Published30 minutes ago Last weekend in Boston, Scotland played their most important game of international football in 28 years, a walk on the wildside against Haiti, a game that put the heart sideways in every Scot but, ultimately, sparked the party to end all parties in the city they called Beantown.
More like Beanotown, more like Scotland, Massachusetts. For almost four decades there was a character in the DC Thomson comic called Ball Boy, a wee football-obsessed lad who couldn't kick a can down a street without thinking he'd scored the winner in a World Cup final.