
All you need to know about Scotland's June friendlies
Who's in the squad? How does it affect World Cup qualification? And how can I watch Scotland's friendlies with Iceland and Liechtenstein.
Who's in the squad? How does it affect World Cup qualification? And how can I watch Scotland's friendlies with Iceland and Liechtenstein.
Watch as Kathleen McGovern scores her first Scotland goal to cancel out Jill Rood's opener for the Netherlands as the already-relegated visitors secure their first Nations League Group A1 point in their second game under new head coach Melissa Andreatta.
Dundee appoint former Scotland centre-half Steven Pressley as the Scottish Premiership club's new head coach.
Steve Clarke has chosen 12 players aged under 25 for the friendlies against Iceland and Liechtenstein as the Scotland head coach looks to the future.
Amy Canavan assesses the first test of Melissa Andreatta's Scotland reign as her new side lose narrowly to Austria.
Melissa Andreatta says she now "has a baseline" from which to work - and retains belief in the squad - after watching Scotland lose 1-0 to Austria and suffer relegation from Women's Nations League A in her opening match as head coach.
Retiring captain Rachel Corsie "undoubtedly" believes the next generation of Scotland players have the "quality" to return to women's major tournaments.
Captain talks about living the dream but also the injury that made it difficult to walk up stairs and get out of the bath Rachel Corsie has revealed she has battled through chronic pain to ensure she could end her career with the dream scenario of playing for her country. The 35-year-old Scotland captain will retire after the Women’s Nations League matches at home to Austria on Friday and the away game against the Netherlands in Tilburg on 3 June. Corsie, who recovered from a knee injury to play her final club game for Aston Villa this month, said: “My body has really wanted this to be my last year but my heart and my head have been stubborn and said ‘I’m not quite ready’.” Continue reading...
Scotland captain Rachel Corsie will retire next week after living in "chronic pain" with a knee injury that kept her out for the majority of the season.
Aberdeen captain Graeme Shinnie tells BBC Scotland's Liam McLeod about Scottish Cup final drama and how he is treating Saturday like it could be his last.
The response of sport’s authorities to disorder has been feeble because the clubs are being allowed to call the shots There is periodic chatter over whether alcohol should be sold on concourses at Scottish football grounds. In public, clubs want to be seen to treat customers as adults. In private, they see the commercial benefit of flogging pints with pies. Punters noisily bemoan treatment as second-class citizens – you can have a beer while watching Scottish rugby – when in reality too many of them act in a manner befitting that status. When Ross County claimed a Livingston supporter spat in the face of their assistant manager at the conclusion to Thursday night’s playoff tie, the damning indictment was this became instantly believable. Scotland’s national sport has a serious behavioural issue, one which threatened to spiral long ago as authorities turned blind eyes. Adding alcohol to the mix would be absurd. Jack MacKenzie has been deemed fit to play in Saturday’s Scottish Cup final as his Aberdeen team look to deny Celtic a domestic treble. Concern around MacKenzie had nothing to do with a hamstring or groin injury. Instead, the young defender was hit in the face by part of a seat after Dundee United fans invaded the Tannadice pitch last Sunday. United had reached the giddy heights of fourth in the Premiership. Pitch invasions have become normalised in Scotland at all levels, further evidenced by Partick Thistle’s contingent at Ayr United during another playoff game. Celebratory in essence, perhaps, but routinely with an aggressive undertone. Continue reading...
Scotland goalkeeper Craig Gordon signs for another season with Heart of Midlothian, with the 42-year-old saying he is "determined to make it better than the last".
Kenya legend Victor Wanyama says the welcoming nature of Scottish football fans was part of the reason for his surprise decision to join Dunfermline Athletic.
Kim Little's team-mates say she is one of the best ever, but her profile remains relatively low key. As she prepares to captain Arsenal in the Champions League final, BBC Sport Scotland looks at her longevity.