Denmark needed just a draw for automatic qualification. Now they must fight for a spot through playoffs.Published On 19 Nov 202519 Nov 2025Click here to share on social mediashare2ShareScotland have qualified for the World Cup finals for the first time since 1998 after a hair-raising match against Denmark that saw the Scottish side secure a memorable 4-2 victory with most of the action taking place in the final minutes.Expectations hung heavy in the night air long before kickoff on Tuesday in Glasgow as Scotland’s date with destiny loomed.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of listDespite qualifying for the last two European Championships, World Cup qualification has proved out of reach for Scotland since France 1998.Yet the Scottish side beat a 10-man Danish side 4-2 in a winner-takes-all match in Group C, with Scott McTominay scoring with a bicycle kick just three minutes into the match, sending Scotland’s supporters at Hampden Park into raptures.The early cheers of the Scottish fans were dampened when Denmark’s Rasmus Hojlund levelled the score.Scotland’s Lawrence Shankland then put the home team ahead again, but that too was equalised by Patrick Dorgu in the 82nd minute. Scotland’s Scott McTominay celebrates scoring their first goal against Denmark on November 18, 2025, in Glasgow [Lee Smith/Reuters]A draw in the game would have given Denmark the group win, and the Danes were in a good position to achieve that result before Kieran Tierney put the Scottish side ahead again three minutes into added time.Kenny McLean then sealed Scotland’s World Cup qualification eight minutes into stoppage time when he chipped a shot over Danish goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel from the halfway line.“You would not believe it,” one match commentator said when Scotland scored their fourth goal, sending fans into delirium and ensuring the game would become part of the fabled folklore of Scottish football. Advertisement “We’ve been on a journey. I spoke to them about it pre-match, about how this is the opportunity we’ve waited for,” Scotland coach Steve Clarke said after the game.“This was the chance, one game. This was like a playoff final. We put everything on the line. There’s always one last step, and it’s always the hardest,” he said. Denmark’s Rasmus Hojlund shoots at the Scottish goal during the FIFA World Cup qualifier at Hampden Park [Russell Cheyne/Reuters]Denmark, who saw Rasmus Kristensen sent off in the 62nd minute, finished second in the group, two points behind Scotland.For much of the game, Denmark appeared to be the superior team. But after an already roller-coaster World Cup qualifying campaign for the Scots, including a 3-2 defeat in Greece on Saturday, the biggest twist was saved to the very end as the two goals in st …