Gordon Strachan saw Scotland concede a late equaliser to England in their 2-2 draw at Hampden and admitted he missed out on the greatest win of his career.

Scotland had bounced back from an Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain goal to lead 2-1 thanks to two Leigh Griffiths free kicks. Harry Kane scored three minutes into stoppage time to deny Scotland, and Strachan, a memorable victory.

"That was the one, at 60 years old, that could have been the best result of my footballing career," Strachan said.

"Because the difference of where the players play and the standard we were playing against, the gulf was probably the biggest gap I have seen for a wee while in big games which I have won.

"To do what they did was absolutely phenomenal. People can talk about their ability, but you cannot do any more than they did - the personality, character and drive.

"It was like a middleweight fighting a heavyweight. You get hit and they keep coming back and back, creating chances."

Strachan praised Griffiths' contribution saying he hadn't seen anyone in a Scotland jersey deliver two goals in that manner.

"For Leigh Griffiths to score two goals after the huge amount of work he put in, that is taking drive to a new level," said the manager. "I have been involved with Scotland for 40 years now and I cannot remember anyone hitting a better free-kick and then coming away and hitting an even better one.

"It was just phenomenal."