How Spain have risen after dire decade to reach Euro 2024 final

Spain's midfielder #17 Nico Williams celebrates scoring his team's third goal with his teammates including Spain's forward #19 Lamine Yamal during the UEFA Euro 2024 round of 16 football match between Spain and Georgia at the Cologne Stadium in Cologne on June 30, 2024. (Photo by Angelos Tzortzinis / AFP)
After spending over a decade bogged down in
disappointment, Spain waltzed their way back to football's peak by reaching
Sunday's Euro 2024 final in Berlin.
Winning two European Championships in 2008 and 2012,
either side of their 2010 World Cup triumph, La Roja were set to dominate
football for years to come.
However, they fell from grace at astonishing speed.
The players destined to replace their golden generation fell desperately short.
Spain's 2014 World Cup defence ended in early
humiliation, battered 5-1 by the Netherlands, crashing out in the group stage.
The two-time defending champions were eliminated by
Italy in the Euro 2016 last-16, with newspaper Marca labelling it "The
End" for Vicente del Bosque's La Roja.
Spain fell at the same stage in the 2018 World Cup
against Russia on penalties, completing over 1,000 passes but failing to hurt
the limited hosts.
A better showing at Euro 2020 took a young side to
the semi-finals but the 2022 World Cup last-16 defeat by Morocco was another
painful exit.
However, the Spanish football federation believed
the team was close to where they needed to be.
They replaced coach Luis Enrique with Luis de la
Fuente, who had coached national youth sides for years with success.
Despite early jitters, including a 2-0 defeat by
Scotland last year, Spain stuck with their little-known coach and are now
reaping the rewards.
De la Fuente earned their first silverware in 11
years by lifting the Nations League last summer, pledging it was only the
beginning.
And so it proved, with La Roja the standout Euros
team, dominating the toughest group featuring defending champions Italy, before
beating hosts Germany and France.
What they have achieved seems remarkable given their
line-up boasts few recognisable stars beyond Manchester City midfielder Rodri.
Barcelona winger Lamine Yamal, 16, will dazzle the
football world for years to come and could earn that billing, but he is only
just starting his career.
On the opposite flank Nico Williams has also burst
into the limelight and may get a big move this summer from Athletic Bilbao.
Elsewhere the team features many 'misfits',
including Marc Cucurella who has struggled at Chelsea, Saudi Arabia-based
Aymeric Laporte, and others who are not standouts for their clubs.
However, their lack of superstars poses no problems.
"I have 26 great players and I'm just lucky that they are Spanish,"
said De la Fuente.
Unlike final opponents England, whose coach Gareth
Southgate is sometimes reluctant to replace struggling icons, or France
building around a sub-par Kylian Mbappe, Spain accept everyone is on an equal
footing.
"The big difference to all the (other)
countries is that we are a team and there is no one leader above the
rest," explained Barcelona's Pedri before the tournament.
De la Fuente, more pragmatic than his predecessor,
is profiting from his willingness to try different approaches.
Spain still enjoy possession but also release the
explosive Yamal and Williams, fire in crosses and let them take risks to beat
their markers.
While other coaches might have opted for one winger
and a possession-friendly midfielder on the other flank, the 63-year-old goes
full throttle with both.
Luis Enrique's Spain tried to pass teams to death
but at times in Euro 2024 La Roja have had less than 50 percent possession.
De la Fuente knows his players better than most of
his counterparts did at the tournament, having coached the vast majority of
them over the past few years.
He won the U19 Euros with Spain in 2013 and the U21
Euros in 2019, plus silver at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. Seven of the starting
line-up that day have played at Euro 2024.
"I know the players very well, what we had
available to us and we needed time to do what we are seeing now," said the
coach this week.
"I am not surprised by it. Cooking this up...
is a long process but we knew the decisions and the path we had to take."
That continuity has proven vital in the
international game where coaches do not typically have long to work with their
players and has taken Spain to the verge of glory once more.
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