Premium
This is an archive article published on June 22, 2008

Italy fight current form, Spain past record

Italy go into Sunday8217;s Euro 2008 quarter-final against Spain knowing that their group stage form has made the world champions look like underdogs.

.

Italy go into Sunday8217;s Euro 2008 quarter-final against Spain knowing that their group stage form has made the world champions look like underdogs.

Spain go into the Vienna match on a roll, looking to extend their unbeaten run to 20 games after winning all three group matches 8212; albeit with decreasing authority 8212; and with their first team raring to go after a week8217;s rest.

In contrast, 2006 World Cup winners Italy limped over the line having been on the brink of an early exit against Romania after their introductory 3-0 thrashing by Netherlands.

But that all counts for nothing now as, apart from a couple of Italy suspensions, the teams start again with a clean slate.

Spain certainly will not be making any assumptions after so often looking the business in the group stage only to quickly fall away in the knockout rounds.

8220;This team have learned a lot since the World Cup,8221; said midfielder Xabi Alonso in reference to their charge through the early stages in 2006 that ended abruptly with defeat by France.

Looking good

A team tagged as 8220;perennial under-achievers8221; have looked good so far. Their neat-passing midfielders have created chance after chance for strikers David Villa and Fernando Torres.

Story continues below this ad

Italy make something of a habit of starting slowly but coming to the boil when it really matters.

Their pedigree demands that they reach the knockout stages and, unlike the nervous Spaniards who get nose bleeds at the mere mention of the last four, once there they settle comfortably and plan for the final.

The tough route in, however, has cost them, with suspensions for midfielders Gennaro Gattuso and Andrea Pirlo.

Experienced pair Massimo Ambrosini and Mauro Camoranesi should replace them and though neither has the relentless destructive appetite of Gattuso nor the class of Pirlo they are both more ambitious in getting forward.

Story continues below this ad

Antonio Cassano is likely to start alongside Luca Toni up front but though it is not a pairing to strike fear into the heart of a top international defence, Toni does carry an aerial threat against a relatively small Spanish back four.

Italy8217;s reshuffled, makeshift defence will have be 100 per cent concentrated to deal with the movement and probing runs of Spain8217;s midfield and attack.

 

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement