Across the three matches, Scotland had just 17 shots.
Since the Euros group stage was introduced in 1980, that’s the joint fewest by a nation – matching Northern Ireland’s total in 2016.
Their combined expected goals (xG) across the finals was 0.91. Miserable, miserable stuff.
Shearer, the Premier League’s all-time leading scorer, pinpointed the Scots’ injury woes and a limited pool of attacking players.
“I don’t think it was for a lack of effort,” he added on BBC One.
Those points were echoed by former West Ham manager David Moyes, watching alongside Shearer and Scotland captain Rachel Corsie in the studio in Berlin.
But that will struggle to stick with a deflated Tartan Army who watched their side score 17 goals across eight qualifiers to reach Germany.
“We were thrilled when we qualified,” Moyes said. “Steve [Clarke] did a good job getting us here and he took us to the last couple of minutes [against Hungary].
“There’s no shame in it. But we don’t have top, top players to make a difference.”