Spain aim to make history on Sunday as they look to become
the first side to win three consecutive international tournaments, but they
will be up against a side who frustrated them in a 1-1 draw on day three of
Euro 2012.
West Germany reached three consecutive finals in the 70’s,
but you sense if Spain win tonight, they will go down as the greatest palette
of players to ever play for a national side. This Spain side is not the all
conquering side of Euro 2008 though. The efforts of the last four years seem to
be catching up with the team (especially the Barcelona players) and their
performance against Portugal was one of their least convincing in recent
tournaments.
Their passing accuracy was down at (just) 75% against
Portugal and Spain look like a long-distance runner desperately trying to make
the finishing line. Performances have not yet peaked, but if Spain manage to
grind out a 1-0 win it will have been a virtuoso lesson in monopolising
possession and dominating games.
I didn’t think I’d say this two months ago after he blazed a
penalty into the Allianz Arena to hand Bayern a spot in the Champions League
final, but Sergio Ramos has arguably been the standout performer for Spain.
Returning to centre-back the 26-year-old has covered for Carlos Puyol with all
the gusto and passion that we are used to from the Barcelona captain. Neither
player is the most technically proficient, but they will attack the ball and
are incredibly committed defenders.
The Panenka penalty that Ramos coolly despatched past Rui Patricio,
was sublime and suggested that the defender has spent the last two months practising
penalties (or at least watching Pirlo). Spain don’t have a striker, and other than
Busquets none of their midfielders has really impressed in Poland and Ukraine. Ramos
has been part of a Spain side that has conceded just one goal and has made some
superb individual contributions leading the way from the more established
Pique.
UEFA and FIFA seem to have an instinctive predisposition to
look away from defenders when awarding their player of the tournament, but if
any defender deserves the accolade it is Ramos, who in the space of three weeks
has matured incredibly, from the young man who already holds the red-card record
at Madrid, into an international standard centre back.
In contrast to the burnt out Spanish, Italy look to be
finding form at the right time and have produced two sensational displays in
the quarters and semi-final. The Juventus inspired defence has been resolute
and Andrea Pirlo, flanked excellently by two midfield dynamos De Rossi and
Marchisio, has been the best midfielder at the tournament.
Pirlo, Buffon, Barzagli and De Rossi are the only survivors
from the World Cup winning squad from 2006 and their play at Euro 2012 has
arguably been more expansive then Spain’s. They dominated their two knockout
games in midfield and with Cassano and Balotelli on-song up front they will
thoroughly challenge the Spanish procession. Spain will need to disrupt the
midfield axis that shields Pirlo or his passing ability will pick holes in the
Spanish backline.
Andrea Pirlo has embarrassingly only been heralded by a
mainstream audience at the age of 33, and the former Inter and AC Milan man has
vindicated Prandelli’s decision to base the Italian team around him. Pirlo is one
of the most gifted midfielders in European football and the level of his appraisal
after the England match indicates the dismissive arrogance of the English
media. The lack of European coverage in England and obsessive admiration of
Pirlo after the quarter final and semi-final confirms that until a player
delivers against England they are immediately dismissed.
Pundits are bemoaning the absence of an ‘English’ Pirlo after
now having it thrust in front of them, but the reality is that Pirlo has been
winning titles and World Cups for years previously without this level of
deification.
Spain beat the Italians 4-2 on penalties in a gripping quarter final at Euro 2008, in what proved a watershed moment for the Spanish national team. Despite playing excellently in previous tournaments they had come un-stuck and choked in the knockout phases and their gritty elimination of the Italian's paved the way for their first major title since 1964 and the start of their current run. Should La Roja win tomorrow it will be a fitting and appropriate opponent for Spain, as they return full circle to the Italians, looking to make history as the greatest assembly of players in football history.
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