Scotland v Croatia

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Scotland v Ireland

WNT Report: Scotland 0-1 Republic of Ireland

Dreams do come true as the Republic of Ireland WNT have secured automatic qualification with a 1-0 win over Scotland at Hampden Park.

Amber Barrett the hero on the night and she finished well after coming off the bench in the second half.

Ireland started positive but were brought down to earth as Martha Thomas rattled the bar, play was brought back as Niamh Fahey had handled the ball on the way to goal, Caroline Weir stepped up but Courtney Brosnan was down quick to save.

Megan Campbell had the ball in the net after 28 minutes,her long range throw in finding its way into the back of the net, ruled out as no player got a touch on its flightpath into the net.

Aine O’Gorman had the next big chance after 36 minutes, her header at the back post was too high, Scotland breathing a sigh of relief after that chance.

In first half injury time, Ireland bombarded the Scottish goal from a Campbell throw in, Sophie Howard made two goal line clearances, with Lee Gibson producing a stunning save to leave it 0-0 at the interval.

Scotland started the second half brighter, Fiona Brown and Weir with some half chances that worried the Irish defence.

Then came the breakthrough, on a sad last few days for the county, the Donegal native Amber Barrett raced clear after a great through ball by Denise O’Sullivan, she raced in and finished well for the lead after 72 minutes.

Erin Cuthbert had a chance minutes later but the heroics of Brosnan on show again, while Diane Caldwell cleared the danger as we entered the final ten minutes.

Ireland dug deep to hang on for a huge win, emotion at the final whistle with the World Cup beckoning.

Scotland v Ireland

Late Christie penalty breaks Irish hearts

Second-half goals from Jack Hendry and a Ryan Christie penalty saw Scotland recover from behind to overwhelm Ireland at Hampden Park, returning top of Nations League Group B1.

The hosts began assured and seemed purposeful in possession, advancing intently with captain John McGinn and Lyndon Dykes among those charging forward.

Ryan Christie and Scott McTominay both had hopeful efforts in the first-half, before Ireland twice had the ball in the back of the net.

The first was correctly ruled offside, as Troy Parrott's overlapping run was a touch early before he wriggled free to score.

He combined with Michael Obafemi to threaten once more shortly later, though Hendry made a big block to fend him off in the area. There wasn't much anyone could do about John Egan's well-struck opener though in the 18th minute.

Jayson Molumby reacted quickest to flick the ball into the danger zone after a partial clearance, with the centre-back smashing beyond Craig Gordon at his near post.

Scotland responded well to that setback, creating many half-chances.

McGinn snatched at two chances in three minutes, while Christie lacked the execution to finish a well-worked passing move, attempting to slip through Stuart Armstrong but overhitting the final ball.

The hosts had a genuine penalty shout ignored as Parrott fouled Tierney in the box. The Arsenal man couldn't continue after a head knock, but soon enough they would equalise after the restart.

Christie finally got his assist, four minutes after the interval after an unmarked Hendry left Bazunu no chance with a looping header - watching it flick in off the far post to equalise.

Dara O'Shea and Nathan Collins made last-ditch challenges to help weather the Scotland storm, before Parrott missed a great chance to retake the lead for Ireland.  

Callum McGregor's loose pass saw Obafemi sprint clear and Gordon did well to thwart him from close-range, but he had time, space to pick his spot and really should've scored.

Chiedozie Ogbene, on in Obafemi's place shortly afterwards, made himself a nuisance and almost scored too - later Matt Doherty and Egan made timely blocks as Scotland threatened again.

Questions were raised and a lengthy VAR check needed after Scotland were awarded a penalty on 80 minutes after substitute Alan Browne handled McTominay's header.

From the spot, Christie was composed in sending Bazunu the wrong way to slot home their matchwinner - on an evening where fine margins settled the frantic encounter.  

It means the Scots need just a point in Krakow to secure League A promotion, while a must-win clash awaits Ireland against Armenia on Tuesday. 

Stephen Kenny's men can take heart from this display, but also know more incisive displays are needed to wrap up games when they're leading in future. 

Scotland v Armenia