Scotland players have been filmed arriving at their base camp for Euro 2020 as excitement builds ahead of Monday's big kick-off.
Steve Clarke and his team are getting ready to represent the country at their first major tournament in 23 years and warmed up for it with clashes with the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
The next phase of their preparations comes at Middlesbrough's Rockliffe Park and the players arrived there on Wednesday afternoon to get ready for Monday's clash with the Czech Republic.
Scotland normally base themselves at the Oriam training centre in Edinburgh but that had been booked by the Czechs before Scotland qualified.
The Czech Republic then decided to base themselves in Prague for the tournament due to Scotland's Covid guidelines, but Clarke and his team have decided against changing their plans at the last minute.
The Scotland team Twitter account posted footage of the players arriving at Rockliffe Hall, which sits adjacent to the training ground where they will put the finishing touches on the preparations.
And there were plenty of awkward hellos to the camera as the likes of Callum McGregor, Billy Gilmour and Kieran Tierney arrived on the scene with their suitcases in tow.
Clarke previously said of the facility: “The most important aspect for me is that we give the players the best possible conditions to perform at Euro 2020.
"That includes the best possible training facilities available and making sure that travel plans are as efficient as they can be for the matches.
“Rockliffe Park enables us to achieve all of that while also allowing the players to focus completely on doing the best they can without any distractions.”
Rockliffe Park in the north east of England sits roughly equidistant from Hampden and Wembley, where Scotland will play all of their Euro 2020 group games.
They face the Czechs in Glasgow on Monday June 14 before heading to London to take on the Auld Enemy the following Friday.
The Group D campaign ends against Croatia at Hampden on Tuesday June 22.
If Clarke's team can make history and become the first Scotland team to qualify for the knockout stage, that would be followed by a last 16 clash, which would take place in Glasgow, London, Bucharest, Budapest or Seville.