No Silva lining for Ireland as Spain hit four

14 06 2012

It is expected that the World and European Champions, Spain, will be too much for Ireland; especially considering the ease with which Croatia disposed of them in their opening contest of Group C.  The Irish succumbed to a 3-1 defeat. Spain, whilst approaching this summer’s tournament with a level of tactical unorthodox, performed well against Italy in their 1-1 draw.

This game promised to serve up a feast of attack versus defence and Ireland’s first performance of Euro 2012 not only suggested so, but did so with ominous potential for a heavy defeat. An inability to create width through the fullbacks, a requisite feature of this tournament, had cost Ireland dearly in the first game. Stephen Ward and John O’Shea characterised the poor distribution that was served out from the back, and in the first half just a third of Ireland’s long ball attempts had pulled off, from an attempted 36. Richard Dunne, alone, had contributed to that total with 8 clearances: just one short of Croatia’s combined total.


Fabregas: at the national team I have more freedom to move up front

The danger men of the respective sides were David Silva and Damien Duff. Before tonight’s tie, Spain’s goal scorer against Italy, Cesc Fabregas, had stated that, “at the national team, Andres [Iniesta], Silva and I have more freedom to move up front, while at Barça, wingers need to keep the pitch wide.” With Arbeloa and Jordi Alba providing the width from the back, the attacking midfield trio have been given the freedom to hunt for goals. Whilst Fabregas did so, Silva provided and he will be the man Ireland will need to watch. Against Italy, Silva had a pass accuracy of 96%. Conversely, Duff made two more key passes for Ireland, 5, than Silva did for Spain.

The one surprise going into the game came from Spain: unsurprisingly they chose to play against Ireland with a striker, Fernando Torres, the shock came with who they dropped – their scorer, Cesc Fabregas. Although the first shot of the game fell to Simon Cox of Ireland, the decision was justified within 4 minutes. Spain’s first attack came early and with Silva on the edge of the box the outcome was predictable. Torres picked up the ball from his compatriot, accelerated past Ward to the right and struck the ball high on the run into the roof of the net, with the ball sailing in between Shay Given’s outstretched arms. Torres’ celebration said it all: a cupped hand to his ear. The fluidity of the goal was characteristic of the opening ten minutes. Ireland were drowning under it and looked to be the first team out of the tournament.

When it rains, which it has only done this tournament when Ireland play, it pours and the Irish looked likely to be washed away. The Spanish were playing with their typical tiki-taka football and were moving up the pitch in segments, happy to pass back knowing Sergio Busquets and Xabi Alonso were capable of giving it back. Silva was the expected player of the final ball and their patience was frustrating for Ireland. When they did get a hold of the play, Spain lifted their energies: in possession the Spaniards were slow, or as they’d prefer controlled; out of possession they were hurried, eager to get the ball back. The problem was Ireland were too deep, so as soon as they did win the ball back, Spain had at least nine men behind it.

After a good closing stage against Italy, Torres had carried his efforts into the start of this game and was looking to build on his early goal. In and around the box he looked dangerous, but with Spain building up slowly and Torres suited to running at or behind his man, it was a case of patience for the Chelsea striker. When he did get the ball, though, he was unselfish in his play: often with his back to goal, he happily looked to bring others into the action, particularly with cross field passes to bring in the left and right backs, Jordi Alba and Arbeloa. But perhaps even more selfless was Andres Iniesta, formerly Spain’s unsung man before his World Cup heroics, but slipping back into the role doing much of the unseen work tonight.

With 33 minutes gone, Ireland were yet to make 100 passes. Spain, on the other hand, had made almost three times as many with 258 registered. Yet, for all their possession, they only had one goal to show for it and it wasn’t as if they had truly tested Given since. Although there were some speculative efforts, most were fairly central. 4 minutes later, though, Spain had already surpassed England’s 90 minute total against France. They continued in the same vein until half-time and carried their 1-0 lead into the break. It seemed almost excessive: it would only take a slip up for Ireland to draw level. That didn’t look likely, mind.

Ireland started the second half much like they did in the first – five minutes late. As Spain came down the left flank, Torres received the ball in the box, had time to put it on to his right foot and proceeded to curl one goal-bound. It was a a well-struck shot, but with little deviation, yet Given chose punch rather than pluck out the air. He was made to pay the price: his parry fell to the feet of Silva who controlled closely, feinted right and shifted the ball onto his favoured left foot, before passing it into the bottom left corner of the goal, past the three Irish defenders that stood between him and Given and past Given’s outstretched arm. Ireland could pack their bags now: Spain weren’t losing this.

Shortly after the lead had been doubled, Barcelona midfielder Xavi had the chance to extend it further, but his close range drive was magnificently saved by the Aston Villa ‘keeper, who was otherwise having a woeful tournament. The lines were cleared, Ireland stepped up and immediately were pushed back by the next wave of Spanish attack.

Spain, like they had all game, proceeded to dominate the next 20 minutes, at which point Xabi Alonso was replaced with Javi Martinez and Ireland began a brief fragmented spell of possession. It provided a flurry of chances in succession for Trapattoni’s men, but as Jonathan Walters rose for a header and was easily dealt with by Iker Casillas under the downpour of rainfall, a moment of clarity struck MayCauseOffence in the face viciously - Stoke are never going to beat Barcelona in a rainy midweek game.

That groundbreaking hypothesis, which will have to be distributed to any remaining fans that still apply such caveman logic, was strengthened moments later when Duff was caught in possession on the halfway line by Silva, who released Torres with a through ball to send him one-on-one with Given. The Spaniard made no mistake, curling his shot to the right of the ‘keeper and seeing the ball nestle in the back of the net. 3-0 Spain.

El Nino, as the now-28 year old was once known, was not going to get his chance to score a hat-trick, though, as Del Bosque rang his second change of the match, replacing the striker with the man whose place he took in the starting line-up – Cesc Fabregas. It was shortly followed by Spain’s third and final substitute: Santi Cazorla replaced Andres Iniesta, who had registered an 87% pass completion rate in his 80 minutes on the pitch.

Spain saw the game out professionally, continuing to pass the ball around effortlessly, something they did a whopping 859 times throughout the course of the game, setting a new European Championship record. Robbie Keane did his best to claw one back for the Irish, forcing a good save out of Iker Casillas down to his left, but Spain had the last say. David Silva took a quick throw-in to Cesc Fabregas, who turned unopposed in the box and drilled a thunderous effort home from an acute angle to give the Spaniards a well-deserved 4-0 lead. Silva now has 4 assists and 1 goal in two games. When Spain score, he is involved.

Ireland are the first team to exit this year’s Euros, however they still have a part to play in the competition with the remaining three teams all yet to qualify from the group. They face Italy, who are hopeless if Croatia avoid defeat and they fail to win, but have every chance of qualifying if they pick up all three points against Ireland. Group C is far from over.

Man of the Match – David Silva





Cesc Rescues Point for Spain

10 06 2012

With an hour to go before kick-off, much was being made of Vicente Del Bosque’s decision to adopt the 4-6-0 formation that had only previously been chosen by Scotland in recent international football. However, with David Villa missing the European Championships, Fernando Torres facing the snub from the starting XI after another media-inhibited season and Fernando Llorente striking an unorthodox leading man for the tiki-taka football of the free-flowing Spain side, it was quite possibly a better method of conquering the problem of having no obvious candidate to fit the role of striker in their current formation than Portugal’s was last night. Especially considering Cesc Fabregas had often been deployed in the centre forward role this season with Barcelona, often accompanied by relative success and the attacking-mindedness of the Spanish midfield.

The formation was having relative spells of success early on, with the saturation of Spanish players adopting areas of the field at any one time forcing the Italians to come forward and into play. Most specifically, in front of their back four, where De Rossi was having to step up and out of his unnatural position of centre-back to deal with the likes of Xavi and Silva threatening to thread through Fabregas and Iniesta at any time. In the opening stage of the game it nearly proved beneficial for the Spaniards, as De Rossi made the move out of defence and as he did so allowed space in behind him, which was dutifully exploited by Spain, which led to their most clear cut chances so far and De Rossi committing a foul that was dealt with when play ceased. Contrastingly, for all the possession Spain were having throughout the first half, many of Italy’s early chances were left to set piece plays – none of which prospered or looked like possessing any promise.

Surprisingly, in the first half hour Sergio Busquets had stayed on his feet and Mario Balotelli had stayed out of trouble, and the game entirely, it seemed. Yet it was unlikely that both would stay the same and come 33 minutes the latter had folded, grabbing the first fistful of attention for a flurry of punches at the ground having not made the most of his first opportunity of the game. With rage ensuing within, Mad Mario had been booked three minutes later and had lost his head for the rest of the game, potentially.

Before half-time could bring a rather dull affair to a close, a few moments of excitement managed to surface with Marchisio unleashing a speculative volleyed effort from outside of the box, Fabregas nearly drawing first blood in the 42nd minute and Iniesta trying his best to two minutes later. With all of their chances falling to these two men and the fact that the majority of international goals are coming from crosses as of late, Llorente may have fancied a second half stint from the bench. Firstly, though, Iker Casillas had to be called into action after awhile in the wilderness, with Balotelli creating the space for Motta to shadow in at the near-post and force a snapshot save out of the Real Madrid ‘keeper.

It continued to be the Barcelona trio of Xavi, Iniesta and Cesc that looked most dangerous to the Italian backline; yet, for the majority of the time at least, Spain were limited to shots outside of the box and Buffon was quick to react to a rasping shot from the boot of Fabregas shortly after the break, before denying teammate Iniesta. Patience was serving Italy well so far and with another stifled attack from the Spaniards, Ramos found himself facing his own goal near the sideline with Balotelli on his shoulder. Ramos dealt with it poorly and the Manchester City striker charged down his clearance, controlled the loose ball and was left to head towards goal in a one-on-one scenario. Fortunately for Spain, Ramos recovered well, but even more fortunate was the opportunity Balotelli provided him with to do so, gifting him the time to get back. Cassano looked on despairingly on the edge of the box as Ramos tackled and Cesare Prandelli took note, hauling Balotelli off for 34-year old Di Natale.

Approaching the 60 minute mark, Spain were enjoying much of the possession, with the Italians completing just 58.5% of the amount of passes Spain had racked up at 403. However, a failure to make their control on the game count saw Di Natale profit: moments after coming on the seasoned Udinese striker had coolly put his team a goal to the good. Latching on to an Andrea Pirlo through ball, the diminutive hustling striker shaped himself from close range and finished across goal, sending the Italians into a one-goal lead.

Now all Italy had to do was park the bus. So far they had done well to limit Spain to the odd shot from outside of the box. Very little was breaking the centre-back pairing of Chiellini and De Rossi. Then, with a quick twist at the hips, a reworking of the feet and a majestic first time left-footed outside of the boot flick through, Silva had set up Fabregas to fire home on his left foot, past the flailing Buffon. A chance quickly followed for Spain to build on their equaliser, but Xavi’s lofted cutback cross fell to left-back Jordi Alba, who, with the best will in the world, was never likely to hit the target and volleyed wide.

With parity restored with the scores level, Del Bosque brought on Fernando Torres for goal scorer Cesc Fabregas and an immediate chance fell to the striker who had just over a month earlier scored at Camp Nou against many of his teammates. Breaking the offside trap, the forward beared down on the Italian 18-yard box and as he shifted right, Buffon did too and luckily scuffled the ball away from the feet of the Spaniard, hoofing it into touch. Di Natale then nearly reinforced his claim as the tactical masterstroke of the game, finding himself free space in the box, but the striker could only guide his shot wide.

The last ten minutes was the Torres show: seemingly the media bandwagon of ill-wishing had written the script. Everything positive Spain created had Torres at the heart of it. An otherwise audacious effort to lob Buffon that would’ve been praised for bravery had it been another striker, was criticised for not being the Torres of old; a clever run into the box and cut back with his left foot was underemphasised in terms of creativity, with the commentators instead focusing on the after shot of the Chelsea striker looking to the skies, and when his elbow struck De Rossi, they suddenly had in interest in what he had done and not what he hadn’t. Simply put, Spain looked more threatening with Torres on the pitch than with him on the bench, but the focus was on his lack of success.

Having been a goal down, Spain have done well to come away with a point. Italy, on the other hand, may rue the fact they let a lead slip so quickly. The Spaniards still look like a force to be reckoned with this tournament, despite the scoreline, but Italy may well be quart-finalists at best, lacking any real dynamism from midfield.

Man of the Match – Iniesta