Ross Stewart's Scotland Recall Ends Four-Year International Hiatus
Southampton striker Ross Stewart has been named in Steve Clarke's World Cup squad, ending a four-year absence from international football, though several younger forwards including Kieron Bowie and Lennon Miller missed the cut.
Steve Clarke named Ross Stewart in Scotland's 26-man World Cup squad on 19 May 2026, ending the Southampton striker's four-year absence from international football. The recall punctuates a remarkable rehabilitation for a player who once appeared destined to become one of Scotland's great unfulfilled talents.
Stewart last featured for his country in 2022, his career derailed by an Achilles injury that kept him sidelined for the better part of two seasons. During that spell, Scotland moved on. Kieran Bowie established himself briefly. Lyndon Dykes carved out a functional, if unspectacular, role up top. The system adapted to the striker it had, not the one it had lost. Now Stewart returns to find a manager who has restructured little and a fanbase hungry for a focal point with genuine goal-scoring pedigree.
The case for Stewart
The numbers are difficult to ignore. Stewart finished the season in encouraging form for Southampton, a club that spent much of the campaign navigating relegation uncertainty. His movement, particularly his willingness to stretch opposition defences and occupy the space between centre-back and full-back, offers Clarke something the current alternative forwards do not consistently provide. Lyndon Dykes andche Adams offer industry and physical presence; Stewart offers the prospect of goals from chances a functional but blunt Scotland side has historically struggled to manufacture.
Clarke, speaking after the squad announcement, made clear he had tracked Stewart's club form closely. The manager's public justification for the recall was straightforward: form dictated selection. No theatre, no curveballs. The decision aligned with what Stewart had earned on the pitch. Whether that form translates to the different rhythms of international football remains the central unanswerable question heading into the finals.
Who did not make it
The harder story from Clarke's announcement is the door that closed. Lennon Miller, the Motherwell-born midfielder who generated considerable buzz during the domestic season, did not make the final 26. Kieron Bowie, whose brief international career had suggested a trajectory toward regular involvement, was also omitted. Oli McBurnie, a regular under previous squad iterations, found himself outside the picture.
These omissions arrive at an uncomfortable moment. Scotland's attacking options beyond the established names have never looked thinner. The pipeline from the Scottish Premiership to international prominence has produced functional Premier League players but few who fundamentally shift the quality of Clarke's forward line. Miller's exclusion, in particular, will generate debate. He offers technical quality and progressive passing that Scotland's midfield currently lacks. The argument that he needs more development time sits awkwardly beside a World Cup calendar that does not pause for educational processes.
The Gordon variable
Also notable is the inclusion of Craig Gordon. At 43, the former Hearts keeper becomes the oldest goalkeeper in the squad by some distance. His presence speaks to the thinness of the goalkeeping pool Clarke commands — and to a player who has shown remarkable durability to remain in contention at an age when most professionals have long since transitioned to coaching or media work. Gordon's selection is not a statement about his current ability so much as a recognition that the alternatives have not made the case to displace him definitively.
What the selection tells us about Clarke
The manager who assembled this squad is not the manager who took Scotland to Euro 2020 and the subsequent World Cup qualification near-miss. He is, by his own admission, working with a thinner squad, fewer viable pathways to goal, and a fanbase whose patience for philosophical experimentation has worn thin. The recall of Stewart fits that profile: it is a pragmatic bet on demonstrated quality rather than a leap toward potential.
Scotland enter the World Cup as unfancied participants. The squad lacks the elite-level talent that defines genuine contenders. What Clarke has instead is a group of players who understand their roles, a defensive structure that has proven difficult to break down, and now — perhaps — a striker capable of turning one chance into three points when it matters most. Whether Stewart is that player will define the next chapter of an international career that has, until now, been defined almost entirely by what might have been.
The sources consulted for this article do not indicate whether Stewart is expected to start the opening group match, or how Clarke intends to integrate him into a forward line that has operated without a natural goal-scorer for the duration of his absence.
