Vicente
del Bosque's side staged a compelling claim to be the greatest international
side of all time as the Euro 2012 final was transformed into an exhibition with
Italy - who performed creditably for long periods - passed brutally into
submission. David Silva's header was reward for Spain's early supremacy and new
Barcelona recruit Jordi Alba doubled the lead just before half-time with a
blistering run and finish. The scoreline was emphatic at the conclusion but
Italy performed with great resolve. Once they were reduced to 10 men after
losing third substitute Thiago Motta to injury, however, they were ruthlessly
exposed by masters of the passing art. Fernando Torres emerged as a late
substitute to make a powerful impact; steering home Spain's third then setting
up Chelsea team-mate Juan Mata to inflict the final wound on a bedraggled
Italy. Spain's virtuoso performance was a decisive answer to a growing band of
critics who had forced coach Del Bosque and his players to defend themselves
against allegations that they had been "boring" throughout Euro 2012
at the pre-match media conference. And even Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger, in
an ill-timed contribution, wrote that Spain "have betrayed their
philosophy and turned it into something more negative". Not on this night.
Every quality that has led to them dominating world football
since they won Euro 2008 and the World Cup in South Africa two years later was
brought to bear.
It was a heartbreaking night for Italy and coach Cesare
Prandelli but there was no shame in being beaten by a team of such quality.
They can reflect with satisfaction on their work before this chastening
evening. Spain, perhaps stung by the words of criticism aimed in their
direction, started with a pace and tempo of passing that the Italians found
impossible to live with. The warning signs were posted for Italy when a long
spell of possession ended with Xavi shooting just over - but it was not long
before they were ahead. Cesc Fabregas was employed in the so-called "False
Nine" role as Del Bosque played without a conventional striker. The former
Arsenal star proved the tactic is a positive force rather than a negative one. He
collected the masterly Andres Iniesta's pass and outflanked Italy defender
Giorgio Chiellini before delivering perfectly for Silva to head beyond keeper
Gianluigi Buffon. It was Chiellini's final contribution as he swiftly succumbed
to the thigh injury that has been troubling him in the later stages of the
tournament and was replaced by Federico Balzaretti. Italy's response to Silva's
goal and the early Spanish onslaught was commendable as Antonio Cassano twice
had shots saved by keeper Iker Casillas but a goal of brilliance in creation
and execution made their task mountainous. Alba demonstrated exactly why
Barcelona were so keen to bring the graduate of their famous La Masia youth
academy back to the Nou Camp from Valencia when he finished a blurring run on
to Xavi's perfect pass with a composed finish past Buffon. Prandelli acted
during the interval, sending on Antonio Di Natale for Cassano. Twice he almost
got the goal that could have halted Spain, heading just over before bringing a
fine save out of Casillas. Italy's third and final change came when Motta
replaced Riccardo Montolivo but Italy's luck was summed up when he suffered a
hamstring injury within minutes and the Azzurri were reduced to 10 men. Spain
were now winning with something to spare and Del Bosque took the opportunity to
remove the outstanding Fabregas and introduce Chelsea striker Torres for the
closing stages. It was an opportunity he took, adding the final flourishes by
steering home Spain's third and unselfishly setting up Mata's finish to round
off a spectacular performance.
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