armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

Panda Team
I'm mostly a football (soccer) fan, but last season I started playing fantasy NFL and really enjoyed it. If there's anything football-related you want me to write about, ask. And hey - if you work for some US publication and want a soccer writer, my rates are very reasonable... :)

More By Panda Team

Premiership INSANIA!!
3 votes, 3 comments
Premiership Preview - Chelsea
5 votes, 1 comment
Premiership Preview - Arsenal
12 votes, 6 comments
View All

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Euro 2008 Spain 0 - 0 Italy (Spain win 4-2 on penalties)

by Panda Team
created June 23, 2008, last edited February 10, 2009
3
Vote

Italy were really responsible for this being 0-0 - with Pirlo (who is basically 100% of their creativity normally) out, they didn't replace him wih Camoranesi, or anybody else creative, but instead chose 4 basically defensive centre-midfielders and stuck them all in one ugly, negative line. And then when they did win the ball they'd aim long for Toni, with Cassano buzzing around him to no great effect. Aragones isn't completely exempt from criticism for how this went, though, because he isn't maximising the talent he's got. What I don't understand is that for the last 3 or so tournaments Spain have quality everywhere but no width (not since Joaquin sparkled in 2002), and here again it was the same narrow setup. Senna anchored the midfield beautifully, Xavi played next to him, Silva was on the left and Iniesta on the right (mostly, there was some licence). So...Xavi is being chosen ahead of Fabregas, which I don't like, but can understand on the grounds of experience, but what is it people like about Iniesta? He's just a tidyish centre-midfielder who will find the odd decent pass, but the idea he can play on the right is weird - he doesn't beat people, he's not explosive, he hasn't got tricks and he's not Pires-clever. And tonight he gave the ball away a lot. Fabregas would do that role much better, and a proper winger like Joaquin (in 2002 form, I'm not sure how he's going now) would be a much better selection. Aragones is definitely leaning towards Spanish-based players in his decisions, I think to the detriment of the team. Certainly when Fabregas and Santi Cazorla came on for Xavi and Iniesta at about the hour Spain were sharper and more dangerous. Torres was taken off for Guiza, who looks alright but wasteful, but David Villa stayed on and demonstrated again why I'm not sure he's the superstar people think he is (he too often fails to get shots off in one-on-ones and he makes bad decisions). David Silva is tidy and useful, a bit like a left-footed Joe Cole, but he ought to have hit the target with his four or so shots that just whistled wide.

For Italy, Panucci did a fine job at centre-back, Di Natale did okay when he came on up front, Toni is still basically an 80s English First Division target man/donkey (seriously, Crouch is a much better player), Ambrosini is less good than David Batty was (who, if he were foreign and playing nowadays, would be regularly hailed by pundits as terrific) and I wish they'd let De Rossi off the leash a bit. Grosso and Zambrotta are both useful, and needed to be because they were all the width there was. Camoranesi is mad a box of frogs but livened them right up when he came on.

Neither side really pushed the tempo up at any point, possibly because it was hot, but Spain were the better side and I'm glad they won it. It was nice that Fabregas got the winning penalty, too, because there's nothing negative in his game at all and he seems very level-headed and likeable altogether (despite being a superstar, he's been doing his A Levels!).

In the semis I don't think there's a lot to choose between them and the Russians, and I will fancy either of those teams against the Germans in the final, set-pieces excepted.

Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Panda Team | June 23, 2008 | June 2008 | Euro 2008 Opinions | Spain Opinions | Italy Opinions | Soccer Opinions | Fabregas Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Ohio State beat Florida State 77-64 in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge

Comments of the Day

0 Agreed. He"s too handsome to ignore for very long.
0 Yeah, awesome... Sumo articles [http://armchairgm.wikia.c...
0 How do they compare to the 1975 Reds?

Play the Picture Game

Best Tackle

New Articles

The 1976 Cincinnati Reds: One of Baseball's Greatest Teams
Thai Circle Takraw
Boat racing (Kaeng Ruer)
Kraabi Krabong! thai sport
Week 13: Bobby Bowden's Last Play

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:Euro_2008_Spain_0_-_0_Italy_%28Spain_win_4-2_on_penalties%29"

This page was last modified 20:37, 24 June 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise