IN a city of bullfighting this was bull****.
Sevilleâs matadors have nothing on how Dutch referee Serdar Gozubuyuk skewered Scotland.
McTominay couldn't believe his goal was chalked-offCredit: GettyThe ref disallowed the stunning strike after VAR reviewCredit: Kenny RamsayMorata scored just over 10 minutes later with Scotland kept waiting on qualificationCredit: GettyEverything he did was a red rag to the Steve Clarke and his side.
But his decision to disallow a Scott McTominay wonder goal at 0-0 was an absolute disgrace.
The records books will show Spainâs Ãlvaro Morata and Oihan Sancet scored the two goals that counted.
Lucas Perez pays part of own transfer fee to rejoin beloved DeportivoBut it was the one that didnât which left such a bad taste on the mouth.
Clarke insisted he didnât want any favours from anyone before a ball was kicked.
Well, he certainly didnât get any.
The VAR decision after 60 minutes robbed Scotland of a huge goal which would have gone a long way to getting the point needed to secure qualification for next summerâs finals.
At first it was chalked off for a foul on the goalkeeper.
Then it was changed to off-side.
Youâd have been forgiven for thinking the officials were simply making it up as they went along.
The contempt Gozubuyuk showed for our team made you believe Uefa will do anything to make sure the big nations reach Germany next year
Now, of course, Scotland are looking for another Spain win against Norway in Oslo on Sunday night.
What is Balenciaga and how do you pronounce it?If that happens all this will quickly be forgotten about.
But for now this didnât half hurt.
Letâs be honest, winning felt unlikely before a ball was kicked.
Spain chose Andalucia for a reason with the record books showing they rarely lost in this part of the world.
Itâs their go-to venue when they need a result. Seville a city no Scottish team has ever won before.
Even with Scotland sitting pretty at the top of Group A - with five wins from five - it was still a daunting prospect.
But it wasnât ever beyond the realms of all possibility that Clarkeâs side could get the point they needed to qualify. And we didnât half make Spain sweat in the searing heat of Seville.
Thatâs what this group of players have given the nation above all else.Â
Hope.
It was always going to be nervy and edgy whenever Spain came forward. That much was certain.
De la Fuenteâs side could have taken the lead inside the first 60 seconds with Ferran Torres missing a chance he usually buries.
There and then every Scot feared the worst.
But despite having the vast, vast majority of the ball, Spain didnât make it count in the first-half.
For Scotland it was all about tracking runners and filling the gaps whenever they appeared.
Callum McGregor was vital in his role in front of the back five.
Being without injured Kieran Tierney was a definite blow but Scott McKenna came into the team and didnât look out of place.
Aaron Hickey was outstanding on the right, making a sensational block to prevent Mikel Oyarzabal scoring in 34 minutes.
When the ball broke for Mikel Merino he hit a shot which smacked the post and fizzed across Angus Gunnâs goal and somehow stayed out of his net to drift out for a goal kick on the opposite side.
It was the kind of moment which made you think this might just be Scotlandâs night.
Morata thought heâd scored in 38 minutes too but the flag went up showing he was a good two or three yards off-side.
By that time Clarke just wanted to get his team into the away changing room to regroup.
But before the half-time whistle went he was dealt a massive blow with Robertson helped off the pitch with a suspected dislocated shoulder.
Heâd been clattered by goalkeeper Unai Simón as he jumped for a high ball, coming off second best, with his night over.
Clarkeâs answer was to put on Evertonâs Nathan Patterson and play him on the right with Hockey shifting over to the left.
In an attacking sense there wasnât much there for Scotland before the break. Lyndon Dykes had a running battle with Aymeric Laporte which saw him booked.
The QPR hitmanâs touches were limited.
But it was all about how the team were fighting for each other all over the pitch to keep Spain at bay.
We certainly werenât going to get any help from the Dutch referee who was hell bent on giving the Euro giants the benefit of any doubt throughout the night.
The decision to disallow McTominayâs wonder strike free-kick on the hour mark was nothing short of a disgrace.
It should have been the goal of his life.
Instead the officials contrived to rob him and Scotland of a precious lead.
The moment it went to VAR to check for a foul everyone knew what was coming next.
Replays showed there had been virtually no contact by Jack Hendry on goalkeeper Simon.
But still the ref sided with the Spanish and awarded them a free-kick.
Joy had suddenly turned to anger and disbelief - with the home side soon taking full advantage of the let-off.
With 73 minutes on the clock Morata made a darting run and stooped to glance a header past Gunn.
It was simply agonising.
Even then Scotland had late chances to level the game with subs Che Adams and Stuart Armstrong blocked from scoring.
But in 86 minutes Sancet pounced after Hickey slipped and it was all over.
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