Sunday 1 July 2012

Euro 2012 Final: ¡Vamos! History boys Spain reign again



THE FINAL
Olympic Stadium, Kiev
SPAIN 4-0 ITALY


SPAIN Casillas (c) - Arbeloa, Ramos, Pique, Alba - Busquets, Xavi, Alonso, Iniesta (Mata 87), Silva (Pedro 59), Fabregas (Torres 75). Goals Silva 14, Alba 40, Torres 84, Mata 88
ITALY Buffon (c) - Abate, Barzagli, Bonucci, Chiellini (Balzaretti 21) - Pirlo, Marchisio, De Rossi, Montolivo (Motta 56) - Cassano (Di Natale 46), Balotelli
Kick-off 7:45pm on BBC/ITV Attendance 60,000 Referee Pedro Proença (Portugal)

SPAIN answered their critics, including me who labelled them with the boring tag, by smashing four goals past Italy in the Euro 2012 Final.

In doing so, the Spanish made history, becoming the first team to win three consecutive international tournaments following their victories at Euro 2008 and World Cup 2010.

Better still, Vicente del Bosque's men entered into the record books with some breathtaking football in this Final match, despite again playing most of it without a recognised striker.

Certainly, the Spanish started well with the most notable effort coming from Xavi who only just cleared the crossbar with his shot on the edge of the box.

It seemed only a matter of time before Spain would score, and the inevitable happened when Andres Iniesta's pin-point pass found Cesc Fabregas on the right of the penalty area.

The former Arsenal man twisted and turned past his marker Giorgio Chiellini before floating a perfect pull-back for David Silva to score with a rare header.

The goal, with less than quarter of an hour gone, forced the Italians to adopt a more attacking approach.

Straight away, the Azzurri seemed to get more into the game and a series of corners and free-kicks did well to stretch Iker Casillas.

Italy continued to be on top of proceedings in the middle of the half, with Antonio Cassano trying to sneak in a shot at the near post before trying his luck minutes later from further out.

In fact, the dominance of Cesare Prandelli's men even extended into possession of the ball but, despite being out-passed for once, the Spanish defence and keeper Casillas seemed equal to every task.

Of course, the Italians remained vulnerable to Spain doubling their lead, on the stroke of half-time, the Azzurri's worst nightmares were imagined.

The second goal came from new Barcelona left-back Jordi Alba who capped a magnificent tournament for him personally by completing a fantastic one-two with Xavi.

Alba picked up the wonderfully-weighted return pass after a blistering run before placing the ball just past Gianluigi Buffon into the corner of the net.

"Football doesn't get much better than that," opined BBC summariser Mark Lawrenson - and, for once, he was correct. Italy now had a monumental task with which to begin the second half.

Nevertheless, Prandelli's men came out fighting gamely.

Half-time substitute Antonio Di Natale almost scored with his first-touch but he could only put his header from Ignazio Abate's cross onto the roof of the net.

Then, after Fabregas just failed to come out on top in a goalmouth scramble at the other end, Di Natale also had Italy's next chance with a fierce drive at goal.

But, just as this excellent end-to-end Final looked to be moving into a higher gear, the game ended as a contest when Thiaggo Motta went down with a pulled hamstring within five minutes of coming on.

This was disastrous for the Italians for whom Motta was a third substitute, following an early injury to Chiellini and a tactical change at half-time to bring on Di Natale. Suddenly, the Italian Job had become Mission: Impossible.

Spain had all the cards in their favour now, and they added salt into Azzurri wounds by introducing Fernando Torres and Juan Mata for Fabregas and Iniesta.

First, on 84 minutes, Torres beat a poor offside trap against increasingly-exhausted defence to become the first man to score in two separate European Championship finals.
Then, with just a minute of the 90 remaining, Mata capped his six minutes of play in the entirety of Euro 2012 with the fourth goal, after a unselfish square pass by Torres.

Incredibly, that assist meant the £50m Chelsea striker won the tournament's Golden Boot with three goals and assist.

Those statistics put him level with Germany's Mario Gomez but the unfancied Torres, of course, did it all in fewer minutes, appearing on the pitch for only 189 in total.

Meanwhile, Torres' opposite number, Balotelli - who worked hard but barely featured in the game - had a rather petulant reaction to Italy's defeat, knocking himself intentionally the fourth official at the final whistle.

It was certainly a disappointing end to a fine tournament for the Manchester City youngster whose day on the international stage is surely yet to come.

After all, he is still only 21 and, in fairness to him, his reaction is perhaps slightly understandable for, truly, Italy did not deserve a four-goal defeat.

In a slightly contradictory way, however, Spain did deserve their four-goal victory.

True, much of the second half was against 10 men. However, Spain had already put themselves into a winning position by then - and they did so by actually using their vaunted superior passing ability to penetrate the opposition defence.

Indeed, this epic display by La Roja - perhaps more than any other match - could yet be the abiding memory of Spain's unprecedented era of dominance.

The task for the rest of Europe, and indeed the world, remains the same as it has been for the last four years: to stop them, somehow.


FOR THE RECORD


GROUP STAGE
Opening matches - First round fallers

GROUP A
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCFri 8 June, 17:00POLAND 1-1 GREECEWarsaw
ITVFri 8 June, 19:45RUSSIA 4-1 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 17:00GREECE 1-2 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 19:45POLAND 1-1 RUSSIA Warsaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 1-0 POLANDWroclaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45GREECE 1-0 RUSSIAWarsaw

Group AWDLFAPts
CZECH REPUBLIC201456
GREECE111334
RUSSIA111534
POLAND021232
Note: GREECE finished above Russia based on head-to-head record (1-0)

GROUP B
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCSat 9 June, 17:00NETHERLANDS 0-1 DENMARKKharkiv
BBCSat 9 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-0 PORTUGALLviv
ITVWed 13 June, 17:00DENMARK 2-3 PORTUGALLviv
BBCWed 13 June, 19:45NETHERLANDS 1-2 GERMANYKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 2-1 NETHERLANDSKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45DENMARK 1-2 GERMANYLviv

Group BWDLFAPts
GERMANY300529
PORTUGAL201546
DENMARK102453
NETHERLANDS003250

GROUP C
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVSun 10 June, 17:00SPAIN 1-1 ITALYGdansk
ITVSun 10 June, 19:45IRELAND 1-3 CROATIAPoznan
BBCThu 14 June, 17:00ITALY 1-1 CROATIAPoznan
ITVThu 14 June, 19:45SPAIN 4-0 IRELANDGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45CROATIA 0-1 SPAINGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45ITALY 2-0 IRELANDPoznan

Group CWDLFAPts
SPAIN210617
ITALY120425
CROATIA111434
IRELAND003190

GROUP D
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVMon 11 June, 17:00FRANCE 1-1 ENGLANDDonetsk
BBCMon 11 June, 19:45UKRAINE 2-1 SWEDEN Kiev
ITVFri 15 June, 17:00UKRAINE 0-2 FRANCEDonetsk
BBCFri 15 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-3 ENGLANDKiev
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45ENGLAND 1-0 UKRAINEDonetsk
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-0 FRANCEKiev

Group DWDLFAPts
ENGLAND210537
FRANCE111334
UKRAINE102243
SWEDEN102553

QUARTER FINALS Match reports
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCThu 21 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 0-1 PORTUGALWarsaw
ITVSat 23 June, 19:45SPAIN 2-0 FRANCE Donetsk
ITVFri 22 June, 19:45GERMANY 4-2 GREECEGdansk
BBCSun 24 June, 19:45ENGLAND 0-0 ITALY*Kiev
*ITALY won 4-2 on penalties.

SEMI FINALS Match reports
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCWed 27 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 0-0 SPAIN*Donetsk
BBCThu 28 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-2 ITALY Warsaw
*SPAIN won 4-2 on penalties

SCORERS
Golden Boot winner: Fernando Torres (3 goals, 1 assist in fewer minutes [189] than Mario Gomez [282])
3 Fernando Torres (Spain), Alan Dzagoev (Russia), Mario Gomez (Germany), Mario Mandzukic (Croatia), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Mario Balotelli (Italy)
2 Andriy Shevchenko (Ukraine), Vaclav Pilar (Czech Republic), Cesc Fabregas (Spain), Petr Jiracek (Czech Republic), Nicklas Bendtner (Denmark), Michael Krohn-Dehli (Denmark), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden), Xabi Alonso (Spain), Dimitris Salpingidis (Greece), David Silva (Spain)
1 Robert Lewandowski (Poland), Roman Shirokov (Russia), Roman Pavlyuchenko (Russia), Antonio di Natale (Italy), Sean St Ledger (Ireland), Nikola Jelavic (Croatia), Joleon Lescott (England), Samir Nasri (France), Theofanis Gekas (Greece), Jakub Blaszczykowski (Poland), Pepe (Portugal), Helder Postiga (Portugal), Silvestre Valera (Portugal), Robin van Persie (Netherlands), Andrea Pirlo (Italy), Jeremy Menez (France), Yohan Cabaye (France), Andy Carroll (England), Olof Mellberg (Sweden), Theo Walcott (England), Danny Welbeck (England), Giorgos Karagounis (Greece), Rafael van der Vaart (Netherlands), Lukas Podolski (Germany), Lars Bender (Germany), Antonio Cassano (Italy), Jesus Navas (Spain), Wayne Rooney (England), Sebastian Larsson (Sweden), Philipp Lahm (Germany), Giorgios Samaras (Greece), Sami Khedira (Germany), Miroslav Klose (Germany), Marko Reus (Germany), Mesut Oezil (Germany), Juan Mata (Spain)
1 own goal Glen Johnson (England) for Sweden

RED CARDS
Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Greece) v Poland
Wojciech Szczesny (Poland) v Greece
Keith Andrews (Ireland) v Italy
Yellow cards: 123

CLASSIFICATION
1 SPAIN - beat Italy 4-0 in the Final
2 ITALY - lost to Spain 0-4 in the Final
3 PORTUGAL - lost to Spain in the semi finals on penalties after 0-0 draw
4 GERMANY - lost 1-2 to Italy in the semi finals
5 ENGLAND - lost to Italy in the quarter finals on penalties after 0-0 draw
6 CZECH REPUBLIC - lost 0-1 to Portugal in the quarter finals
7 GREECE - lost 2-4 to Germany in the quarter finals
8 FRANCE - lost 0-2 to Spain in the quarter finals
9 RUSSIA - eliminated at the group stage with four points (+2 GD)
10 CROATIA - eliminated at the group stage with four points (+1 GD)
11 SWEDEN - eliminated at the group stage with three points (0 GD)
12 DENMARK - eliminated at the group stage with three points (-1 GD)
13 UKRAINE - eliminated at the group stage with three points (-2 GD)
14 POLAND - eliminated at the group stage with two points
15 NETHERLANDS - eliminated at the group stage with zero points (-3 GD)
16 IRELAND - eliminated at the group stage with zero points (-8 GD)

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