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How will Scotland approach Morocco game after opening win?
Image source, Reuters Image caption, How will Scotland approach games against Morocco and Brazil after a tense opening victory over Haiti in Boston? By Andy Burke BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter in Boston Published 2 hours ago The Scottish sporting psyche demands that even in victory, the mind starts to drift forward to when and how it might all come crashing down. Scotland's nervy opening 1-0 World Cup win over Haiti threw up plenty of questions. Why were the Scots made to sweat by a side ranked 83 in the world? How would that level of performance hold up against the teams ranked seven and six - Morocco and Brazil, their next two opponents? Will the slender winning margin come back to bite when goal difference could be the key to reaching the knockout stages? Maybe, though, it is better to step back and remember the big picture. John McGinn's strike delivered Scotland's first World Cup win in 36 years, just their fifth overall and their first opening-match victory at the tournament in 44 years. Steve Clarke's side top Group C - for now at least - so perhaps this is a moment worth savouring. The 20-year-old who stole the show on Scotland's World Cup return Published 7 hours ago Why Haiti v Scotland was antidote to the ills of world football Published 14 hours ago What does 1-0 win mean for Scotland's chances of qualification? Published 13 hours ago 'Job done, that's all that matters' "The performance wasn't dazzling, but it's a World Cup victory," said former Scotland forward James McFadden, a man who carried the hopes of the nation for so long without ever reaching the greatest stage of all. "Scotland don't win a lot of games at the World Cup. In fact, Scotland don't play at many World Cups, so I think it's huge. "It was a must-win in terms of hopes and aspirations of getting out of the group. It felt a wee bit all or nothing and you've still got two more games, so it's hugely positive. "We have a real chance at getting out of the group. We've never seen a Scotland team do it, this could be the team to do it, and it all hinged on winning this game. "It doesn't matter how we got it done, we got the job done and that's all that matters." Back to one up top? The failure to add more goals against the lowest-ranked side in the competition is likely to gnaw away at those old enough to remember the World Cups of 1974, 1978 and 1982 when Scotland exited on goal difference. The flip side is the Scots are just one good performance away from making history by progressing to the knockout stages for the first time. With 32 of the 48 nations going through, a point against either Morocco or Brazil - who drew 1-1 on Saturday night - will almost certainly guarantee progress. Three points could well be enough if the goals against tally is low. Might that mean we see a more cautious approach in the next two games? Clarke went with two strikers against Haiti and former Scotland skipper Scott Brown expects one to drop out for the remaining Group C matches. "I thi