“Under Luis de la Fuente, Spain are a different beast. The nation that came to dominate international football 15 years ago with its commitment to slow, methodical possession football has not entirely changed its identity. This is, after all, a side that plays 4-3-3, uses a high defensive line, has good ball-playing centre-backs and a sturdy holding midfielder who is good at distributing the ball. But they nevertheless possess a different mentality: a determination to get the ball forward quicker, to attack with genuine width, to use a proper centre-forward. The attackers received rave reviews in the group stage. The 2-1 extra-time victory in the quarter-final over Germany, a meeting between the tournament’s best two sides, was all about the central midfielders. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Daily Archives: July 6, 2024
France’s defence is controlled, disciplined and built in the image of Didier Deschamps
“Despite having an array of attacking talent at his disposal, not one of Deschamps’ players has scored a goal from open play during Euro 2024. And yet his team are through to a semi-final against Spain having beaten Portugal on penalties 5-3 following a 0-0 draw after extra time. For all of France’s offensive woes, they make up for it with the best defence of the tournament. They have conceded just one goal, a penalty against Poland (twice taken by Robert Lewandowski), in five games and are yet to go behind. Les Bleus have faced Romelu Lukaku, Lewandowski, Memphis Depay and Cristiano Ronaldo, who have a combined 344 international goals, admittedly some in better form than others. …”
HY Times/The Athletic
Martinez the saviour after Messi’s Panenka miss – how Argentina beat Ecuador on penalties
“The entire NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas gasped. The whistle blew and Lionel Messi moved towards the ball. Messi swung his famous left foot down at the ball… and chose a Panenka-style penalty to give his side the lead in the shootout. Except he didn’t. The Ecuador goalkeeper Alexander Dominguez dived to his left but the ball hit the crossbar and set in motion a shootout that had it all — including the now customary Emiliano Martinez antics that helped the Copa Americaholders win 4-2 on penalties to advance to the semi-final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
