Scott Mctominay 20 Note Brings 4-2 Denmark Goal to Bank of Scotland

Scott Mctominay 20 Note Brings 4-2 Denmark Goal to Bank of Scotland

The Bank of Scotland has unveiled a limited edition £20 note tied to the scott mctominay 20 note story, using an image inspired by his overhead kick in Scotland’s 4-2 win over Denmark. Only 100 of the new notes were printed, turning a football moment into a scarce collector item.

The design celebrates Scotland’s return to the FIFA World Cup for the first time since 1998. It also puts McTominay’s goal, scored in the third minute against Denmark in November, into banknote form beside the Forth Bridge.

McTominay and the Denmark goal

McTominay described seeing his goal on the note as “incredibly special.” He said, “Reaching the biggest stage of world football is something every player dreams of, and I know it means everything to our fans.”

He added, “Moments like that belong to everyone who follows the team, so seeing my goal featured on a Scottish banknote feels incredibly special.” The Napoli midfielder also said, “Being able to work with Bank of Scotland to turn it into something that also supports Crisis and the work they do to tackle homelessness makes me even more proud.”

Bank of Scotland vaults

Fifty of the notes are being made available through collector auctions, a prize draw, and two one-day pop-up vaults in Glasgow and Edinburgh. Fans who correctly crack the vault code can get one of the limited-edition notes.

The remaining notes sit at the center of the scarcity story. With just 100 printed and only 50 released through those channels, the note is set up as a short-run collectible rather than a standard issue piece of currency.

Crisis and the Forth Bridge

Proceeds from the auction and prize draw will go to Bank of Scotland’s charity partner, Crisis, the national charity for people experiencing homelessness. The overhead kick has already been immortalised in a mural on a tenement gable next to Hampden Park Stadium in Glasgow, and this release pushes that same moment into another form of public display.

For fans, the practical route is simple: enter the prize draw, bid in the auctions, or try to solve the vault code in Glasgow or Edinburgh. For Scotland supporters, the note ties McTominay’s third-minute strike to the 28-year wait that ended with a 4-2 win over Denmark and a place back at the World Cup.

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