By : www.junrichovaldogino.blogspot.com
July 1, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Spain beat Italy 4-0 in the final of Euro 2012 in Kiev
- Goals from David Silva, Jordi Alba, Fernando Torres and Juan Mata seal win
- Spain first team to successfully defend European Championship title
- La Roja also won the 2010 World Cup in South Africa
It was a breathtaking
display from the 2010 World Cup winners, with victory all but sealed by
halftime as goals from David Silva and Jordi Alba gave them a 2-0 lead.
Substitutes Fernando Torres and Juan Mata rounded off the emphatic win with two late strikes.
Victory in the final also
represents a triumph for 61-year-old coach Vicente Del Bosque, the
first man to lead teams to the World Cup, European Championships and
European Champions League crowns, the latter with Real Madrid in 2000
and 2002.
"This success in Spanish
football is something historic, and now we have to look to the future
and try to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil," he told gathered
reporters.




But for Italy and their
coach Cesare Prandelli it was a bitter end to a tournament which they
had earlier graced with their imaginative performances.
"We came up against a terrific side," Prandelli admitted.
Euro 2012 LIVE: Spain vs Italy
La Roja shone brightly from the start and with a cutting edge, despite again starting the match without a recognized striker.
Barcelona's Xavi
Hernandez brushed the crossbar with a fierce shot in the 10th minute
after dazzling interplay but it did not take long for the pressure to
pay off.
Xavi's club teammate
Andres Iniesta threaded a perfect pass through for Cesc Fabregas to
cross for David Silva to head home on 14 minutes.
Italy, who caused such a
shock with a 2-1 win over Germany in the semifinals, responded with a
pair of Antonio Cassano efforts, but with Mario Balotelli unable to make
much impression they always looked second best.
Spain went further ahead just before halftime and the goal was typical off their all round teamwork.
Defender Jordi Alba
exchanged passes with Xavi and burst through the center of the Italian
defense before easily beating Gianluigi Buffon.
This success in Spanish football is something historic
Vicente Del Bosque
Vicente Del Bosque
After the break, Italy
responded with a pair of chances for Antonio di Natali, the first a
header, the second with a clearer sight of goal only to be denied twice
in quick succession by Spain captain Iker Casillas.
Italian hopes of a
comeback took a further dent when their final substitute, Thiago Motta,
lasted only five minutes before being stretchered off.
Against a tiring team with only 10 men, Spain eventually took full advantage after the introduction of Chelsea's Torres.
Xavi found him with
another superb pass and he slotted home the third on 84 minutes,
becoming the first man to score in two successive European Championship
finals.
He had grabbed the only goal of the 2008 final win over Germany.
Torres then cleverly set up his club teammate Mata to score with virtually his first touch of the ball.
In doing so, Torres clinched the tournament's Golden Boot for his joint leading three goals and that final assist.
We came up against a terrific side
Cesare Prandelli
Cesare Prandelli
It left Casillas to lift
the trophy in the magnificent Olympic Stadium, the Real Madrid
goalkeeper reveling in yet another showpiece triumph for a team many are
calling the greatest in history.
"This is such a truly wonderful moment. The second goal from Jordi (Alba) clinched it really," he told Telecinco television.
"It's been four
marvelous years. You might think that a 4-0 margin against Italy means
it was easy -- but we have been gradually stepping up as the tournament
went along."
Sunday's final set the seal on three weeks of competition in Ukraine and Poland at eight match venues and involving 16 teams.
Twenty four national
sides will take their place in the next finals in France in 2016 and
they will do well to match the overall high standard of attacking play
in Euro 2012.
Incidents of racist
chanting and violent clashes between supporters from Poland and Russia
marred the group stages, but fears of widespread fan violence proved
just fears.
This is such a truly wonderful moment. The second goal from Jordi (Alba) clinched it really
Iker Casillas
Iker Casillas
Ukraine's alleged
mistreatment of jailed opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko also led to
threats of a boycott by European political leaders, but German
Chancellor Angela Merkel attended their quarterfinal victory over
Greece.
Italian Prime Minister
Mario Monti and his Spanish counterpart Mariano Rayoy were guests at the
final, a welcome distraction perhaps from the economic turmoil
engulfing their austerity-hit countries in the Eurozone crisis.
More controversially,
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko was also among the dignitaries,
despite being the subject of a European Union travel ban.
His invite sparked a protest from a feminist group in Kiev before the final.
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