“He would not like speaking about his story,” John McGinn instructed the Scottish FA.
“He’ll no like listening to it – however that’ll by no means occur once more. Half-time soccer to go so rapidly to Hull, Liverpool, Champions League winner, Premier League winner, captaining your nation at a World Cup. That is fairytale stuff.
“It is a documentary I am unable to wait to take a seat again and watch, the Andy Robertson documentary.”
His supervisor at Hull, Steve Bruce, cited Robertson’s capability to develop and meet larger challenges as they got here alongside. Strachan mentioned his intelligence meant he discovered extraordinarily rapidly.
Robertson primarily ascribes his ascent to “luck” in having coaches and managers who have been keen to provide him an opportunity, in addition to his work ethic.
“What I may management is I went into soccer with: ‘I’ll give this 100% and, if I do not make it, not less than I can look again and go, you recognize what, I gave that completely all the pieces and wasn’t for me.”
Robertson is on his approach to surpassing the good Dalglish’s file of 102 caps for Scotland and already has probably the most appearances as captain.
The McTominay mural marking the midfielder’s overhead kick within the defining sport in opposition to Denmark adorns a tenement subsequent to Hampden, only some miles from the place Robertson grew up. It could want some firm.
Robertson is the boy who went from posting about being broke to ruffling Lionel Messi’s hair on his approach to profitable the Champions League.
From answering the Hampden telephones to ending Scotland’s World Cup harm in the identical place, 14 years on.
He won’t like to listen to it, however it’s a story that ought to encourage younger Scots for generations.













