Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 to mark a winning return to the World Cup

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 14 Jun 2026 A scrappy finish by John McGinn allowed Scotland to mark their return to the World Cup after a 28-year absence with a nervy 1-0 win over outsiders Haiti. Aston Villa captain McGinn fired in with the aid of a deflection just before the half-hour mark at the Gillette Stadium just outside Boston, which was filled to its 64,000 capacity with a majority of Scottish fans. They have travelled to the United States in large numbers to follow Scotland’s first World Cup campaign since 1998 and were able to celebrate a rare victory at the tournament as they go top of Group C. It is Scotland’s first win at a World Cup since a 2-1 defeat of Sweden in Italy in 1990, and their first victory at any major tournament in 30 years, since Euro 96. Steve Clarke’s team are bidding to make history by reaching the knockout stages, something Scotland have never done at the World Cup. They had to hang on grimly at the end, but the victory puts them on course to get to the last 32, especially as t...

Bank of Scotland unveils limited edition £20 banknote featuring Scott McTominay

The hum of the Glasgow crowd had barely faded when the designers at the Bank of Scotland went to work. It was November 2025. Hampden Park had just witnessed history. With a thunderous strike in the dying minutes against Denmark, Scott McTominay had done the unthinkable—he had secured Scotland's spot in the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

In the weeks that followed, the bank decided that a standard commemorative coin simply wouldn't do for a moment of this magnitude. They wanted something that captured the raw energy of Scottish football. They decided to print money. But it couldn't be just any money; it had to be impossibly rare. Only 100 notes would ever leave the printing presses.
On May 25, 2026, the wraps were pulled off the design. The front of the crisp polymer £20 note looks familiar, bearing the traditional portrait of Sir Walter Scott. But flip it over, and the note transforms into a piece of modern Scottish folklore. Towering over the iconic Glenfinnan Viaduct is a vivid illustration of McTominay himself, captured mid-celebration, his arms outstretched in pure triumph.
For note collectors and football fanatics alike, the scramble began instantly. With no notes entering general circulation, getting a hold of one meant cracking security codes at pop-up "vaults" in Edinburgh, entering a high-stakes charity raffle, or battling deep-pocketed bidders in a live global auction. It wasn't just twenty pounds anymore—it was a piece of the Tartan Army's soul, immortalized in ink and polymer.
Official Charity Auction: An e-auction is currently live on Spink & Son and will close on June 26, 2026. Available items include 9 standard limited-edition notes, 15 notes hand-signed by McTominay, and 1 ultra-rare package featuring a signed note paired with the actual boots he wore during the match against Denmark. All proceeds benefit the homelessness charity Crisis Scotland. 

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