Andy Robertson has insisted the Scotland players were "pretty relaxed" as they claimed a 1-0 win over Haiti to "achieve their dreams" in their first World Cup outing.
Scotland top Group C after John McGinn's strike against Haiti, after Brazil and Morocco drew 1-1 earlier in the day.
Robertson and Co were not fully firing at the top of their game, but did enough to claim a historic victory, one that the country has waited 36 years for.
Despite some nervy moments, particularly with Haiti ramping up the pressure in the second half, Robertson reckons the win felt comfortable for the players on the pitch in Boston.
He told the BBC: "What an amazing feeling. The lads achieved their dreams today.
"It was such a long day waiting, I can't imagine what the fans back home were like staying up so late.
"The fact we managed to walk out on to the pitch and sing the national anthem together, it was so special. To then go and follow it up with a win, it doesn't get much better than that.
"Three important points - OK people expected us to win, but we had to go out and do it. It was so important to win that game and I'm so glad we did it.
"The biggest thing was when we scored we didn't look like conceding, and that has to be a credit to every single player out there that defended for their lives.
"We worked so well from a defensive point of view and when you're 1-0 up, that's what you need.
"It's the World Cup, it's the biggest stage. People get nervous near the end, but we felt pretty relaxed on the pitch."