Scotland have won both of their two previous meetings with Liechtenstein, with those two victories coming in Euro 2012 qualification (2-1 home, 1-0 away).
Liechtenstein have only won one of their last 76 matches against nations ranked inside the top 100 of the FIFA rankings (D7 L68), defeating Luxembourg 2-1 in an October 2020 friendly.
Scotland have failed to win five of their last six internationals against opponents ranked lower than them in the FIFA rankings (D3 L2), having won 13 of their previous 15 matches against such opposition (L2).
Liechtenstein are winless in their last 26 home games across all competitions (D4 L22) since a 2-0 victory over Gibraltar in September 2018. Additionally, they’ve scored in just one of their last 15 matches on home soil (a 3-1 loss to San Marino in November last year).
Scotland have won their last two away games in all competitions and are looking to win three consecutive matches on the road for the first time since November 2021.
This will be Scotland manager Steve Clarke’s 68th game in charge, which will see him move level with Jock Stein as the joint-second most games managed by an individual for the Tartan Army (Craig Brown, 71).
John McGinn has scored in two of his last five games for Scotland, and has been directly involved in more than twice as many goals than any other player for the Tartan Army under Steve Clarke (29 – 20 goals, nine assists).
John Souttar has been directly involved in two goals across his last four appearances for Scotland (one goal, one assist) – more contributions than he managed in his first 12 matches for the Tartan Army (one).