Bullshit, it'll be so close that it'll take 14 different recounts before anyone even hazards a guess what the result is.
I can actually see a Quebec-style situation e.g. 2-3% difference maximum. People are really underestimating how much things narrow in a short space of time.
As an aside, Scotland is actually a country without a national anthem.
This is our "de facto" and unofficial anthem being sung at the Commonwealth Games but I'm not sure if I'm happy with it. The poetry of it isn't great and it's not as rousing as it should be. The problem is I'm not sure about the others either. The most popular answer to this topic being brought up in a conversation in Scotland is "we need to write a new one" but who the hang is going to do it? I just know it'll be Midge Ure and Marti Pellow from Wet Wet Wet or something and it'll be utterly shite. So shite in fact we'll go right back to singing Flower of Scotland at sports events as soon as we can.
The alternatives are
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Highland Cathedral, written by Germans. It's a very nice pipe tune but the lyrics aren't very good and nobody knows them.
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Scots Wha Hae, our historical de-facto anthem from the late 18th, early 19th centuries. It's my personal favourite but it's a bit too nationalistic for a lot of people's tastes.
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Freedom Come All Ye, a song about social justice and change in the world, very internationalist etc. It's an "international anthem" if there ever was one. The lyrics are also very well written and it's a powerful song.
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Scotland the Brave, a good pipe tune, our "acceptable" anthem formerly played at the Commonwealth Games and the like. I don't like it because I see Imperialist associations with it. It's Scotland's imperial anthem, basically. Nobody knows the lyrics anymore.
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Is There For Honest Poverty, another Burns song like Scots Wha Hae. An early Socialist/Leftist anthem that speaks of how the "honest man, though ever so poor, is king of men" and so on, but very popular. It's one of my favourite songs for its lyrics but I'm not sure if it could be played successfully at a sports event.
This is how it's meant to be sung, of course.*:
Auld Lang Syne, the song all of you probably sing at New Year. Written by Burns again it's a very nice song about companionship, nostalgia and remembrance. Nothing too controversial, everyone knows the lyrics (at least in Scotland). If we use this it would be a bit like the Koreans using
"Arirang" as a national anthem.