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World Cup 2010

Everything you need to know about the shebang in South Africa


Tim Stannard

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Spain's secret of World Cup success


Monday 21 June 2010 12:22

Spain’s oft-displayed disgust of Italian football is largely driven by envy.

So much so, it seems, that the initial gameplan of Spain in South Africa was to lift the World Cup in a manner that would make those pasta-chompers in Pisa weep with pride: by failing to win a single match in a conventional fashion all the way through to the final.

However, the message from the Spain camp since Wednesday’s defeat to Switzerland is that this plan has been cast onto the tapas bar floor of history with the realisation that the general gist of this summer’s footballing get-together is to win matches, thus allowing progress to the remaining stages of the tournament.

“We’re going to face the game as if it’s a final!” bellowed Vicente del Bosque, finally grasping the concept of cups. “This is a final for us!” whooped Carles Puyol in agreement.

“Our side plays better football than anyone else and is going to face each match as if it were a final!” cheerleadered the Lady Macbeth of the La Selección, Sara Carbonero, waving her pom-poms with gay abandon. 

Although the various evil corporations who have paid good money to use the desperately bad acting skills of the Spanish squad in their TV spots have increased the frequency of the adverts, with The Man realising that a World Cup elimination could be a matter of hours away, there is a general vibe from the Spanish camp of confidence and calm ahead of the clash with Honduras. 

“We aren’t going to change our style just because of one defeat,” claims Xabi Alonso, a message repeated by former Liverpool team-mate Fernando Torres who has been well and truly spooked by the notion of FIFA detention facilities and their rigorous rogue-state ways.

“If we die, then we will die following our own ideas, not by attempting something different,” claimed the striker that some predict will be starting for Spain alongside Davids Villa and Silva, with Andrés Iniesta still struggling with a muscle twang.

Should the worst happen on Monday night in Ellis Park then Marca’s pet referee Rafa Guerrero is already blaming the man in the middle for the defeat. Japan’s Yuichi Nishimura is the wrong choice, complains Guerrero, because he has insufficient international experience and “follows the rules to the letter of the law, like a good Japanese” and “tends to be excessively rigorous.”

“If there has to be some kind of gesture to the Oriental world then let it be peaceful and celebratory in a Japanese restaurant after the game,” opines the former ref.

Incidentally, Rafa also moans that Howard Webb, the referee for the Switzerland clash, wasn’t rigorous enough and “failed to see the offside for the Swiss goal and the penalty on Silva,” making every word of Monday’s column the gibberings of a clueless buffoon.

The two main Spanish supporters, Marca and AS, are split down the middle on how things are going to go. The former are calling for a tonking to remind the rest of the world who's really wearing the title-favourite trousers at this World Cup.

Monday’s editorial claims that the dark days of pessimism are over and that “Spain now face crucial matches with the character of winners and this personality is enough to bring confidence that we are going to save the situation. And score a lot of goals, too.”

AS are in more of a skittish mood, with director Alfredo Relaño unsure that Del Bosque has the team's line-up quite right. “He has given Senna’s job to two players, Xabi Alonso and Sergio Busquets,” moans the chief AS man before dithering over whether Torres, Cesc and Navas should be starting.

Now that the Spanish team have grasped the ‘Finals’ concept of the World Cup, a victory is generally expected. However, a win by a fairly chunky margin is also being called for to give Spain every chance of topping their group and avoiding a possible clash with the handballing Brazilians in the next round.

A defeat and it will be heads-on-sticks, run-for-the-hills time in Spain with the side's nickname ‘the Red Fury’ taking on a very different meaning indeed.

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About Tim Stannard

La Liga Loca is the playground for the evil, more childish half of Tim Stannard’s psyche to be let loose. The other 50% is a contributor to FourFourTwo magazine, Football365, Sabotage Times as well as other publications such as UEFA Champions Magazine and When Saturday Comes. He is also a regular guest on Real Madrid TV’s Extra Time show and works as a TV producer extraordinaire for hire. To contact Tim directly email laligaloca@yahoo.co.uk

Comments

  June 21, 2010 13:43

Giovanni said:

Senna is not the same Senna from euro 2008.. And there is no suitable replacement for him. Unlike busquets, he had a good range of passing. Unlike Xabi, he could put in a good challenge and break up play.

Two spain regulars left out from villareal, and its not that fat little idiot Carzola that they'll be missing.

  June 21, 2010 14:47

JohnPJones said:

Rafa is no one to criticise a referee, incoherent, stubborn and generaly very poor at being a linesman, his career spans a plethora of howlers, each more comical than the next... provided you are not on the recieving end.

Spain's issues are simple enough... clogged midfields might be a good idea vs the Germany, Portugal, or Brazil of this world, but a stalwart well marshalled Switzerland it was a waste... X.Alonso shoving Busquets out of the way.

Senna's omission was ominous in my mind at least, (the Euro was thanks to him, Casillas and Xavi). However, I think Del Bosque has to realise he can do the same job with EITHER Alonso, or Busquets, NOT both...

Oh and putting extra firepower at the front is always an idea, afterall, copying Barça all the way will not work, the de-clogger, Messi, isn't Spanish.

  June 21, 2010 18:24

don_cule said:

Dare I say those comments of the referee for the Spain game by MARCA's ref are ever do slightly racist?

Am I allowed to say that?

Is this comment even worth writing?

Help! Mr.Stannard! Help! All those media law classes are blunting my opinion!

Germany to win the final against Latin American opposition.

  June 21, 2010 23:03

JohnPJones said:

Tim, checked the live FFT... don't agree with your analysis, I think Navas is a waste of space, reminds me of Steve McManaman, a lot of dribling to go nowhere...

And what the hell is wrong with Torres?

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