Posts Tagged ‘Republic of Ireland’

The SFG team continues its post-mortem of Euro 2012 with a look at Group C, perhaps an understated group pre-tournament,  which eventually involved the two finalists.

Spain

The Good

Spain are champions of Europe once again. By winning Euro 2012, they became the first European side to win three major international championships in a row and will now surely go down as one of the all-time great international sides. Their performance in the final against Italy was the best performance by any team in the whole tournament. They were much more energetic than in previous matches, playing at a tempo that the Italians couldn’t deal with. It was a performance that will be remembered years from now and will likely be the defining result of this Golden Era of Spanish football.

One major positive was the emergence of Jordi Alba on the international stage. Spain, due to their personnel and tactics, naturally lack width in their side so Alba’s role in the side was a huge factor in their success as he was able to stretch their play out wide and provide another attacking outlet. It was only fitting that he picked up a goal (and a superb one at that) in the final. Other standout players included Andres Iniesta, whose dazzling dribbles and uncanny ability to find space was brilliant throughout the tournament.

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As an alternative to team of the tournament, Sandals For Goalposts have compiled a list of players who have underachieved, underwhelmed and were down-right rubbish during the tournament.

GK – Shay Given (Republic of Ireland)

The Republic of Ireland keeper was pretty poor during the tournament, conceding a variety of goal that were deemed to be “soft”, as well as looking nervy between the sticks from time to time. Although the rest of the team were bad, Shay has to shoulder some of the blame.

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In the final round of Group C games, the Italians took on the Irish in Poznan with the former looking to progress to the quarter-finals with a win. Having already been eliminated from the tournament last week, Republic of Ireland were playing for nothing but pride tonight. Pride; it was a word which resonated with the entire team, perhaps none more so than Damien Duff who was handed the captain’s armband by Robbie Keane to mark his 100th cap.

1. Too little, too late.
Despite being considered an outside bet prior to the tournament, ROI’s qualities were never in doubt. Manager Giovanni Trapattoni shaped his team into a 4-4-2 making them hard to beat, especially with their industrious back-line and midfield. However, in their last two games at the Euros, ROI had conceded goals in the first five minutes of each half. Concentration and positioning brought into question, they needed to make sure there would be no mistakes tonight. Balotelli’s goal, Italy’s second, painted a misleading picture as this was not the Ireland we had seen in the last two games. There was plenty of grit, passion and work rate in tonight’s performance – more so than usual, certainly. Unfortunately for them, it came too late.

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