Spain's opponents are adapting but the Spanish reign victorious after their young players return from Israel with the Under-21 Championship
World Cup and another European Championship were collected playing safety-first keep-ball. For all the criticism of its supposed negativity in Poland and Ukraine there were signs of another Spain emerging, one that had begun to come to terms with the problem posed by an opponent that sits deep against it.
It is an issue any possession-based side will have. If you dominate the ball
to the extent that an opponent despairs of ever winning it back, that opponent
will eventually simply stick men behind the ball, allowing you possession but
trying to deny you space in the final third to create any goal scoring
opportunities. Spain's response for a long time when faced with such an opponent
has been simply to keep passing. The process is attritional but Spain
essentially knows that as long as it has the ball it isn't going to concede and
that, eventually, an opponent is likely to be worn down. A mistake -- and a goal
-- will come.
At the Euros, Vicente del Bosque, the Spain coach, spoke again and again
about "control." But he also spoke about "profundidad" -- depth of
field. If an opponent packs men behind the ball, what is lost is depth of field:
Spanish attacks essentially start higher up the pitch and that means that
"verticalidad" -- verticality, playing the ball towards goal -- is far
harder. The risk is that the team with the ball ends up playing too
horizontally, going back and forth across the pitch without making any progress,
without generating the burst of speed necessary to puncture a well-drilled
rearguard.
That is why Jordi Alba is such an important addition. Although ostensibly a
left-back, he is a converted winger and has many of the technical attributes
you'd expect of an attacking player. But vitally, he has great pace and stamina,
working up and down that left flank, and seems to have the gift of timing his
runs to arrive in space. He did it against Italy in the final of the Euros last
year and he added another two in the 3-0 win over Nigeria on Sunday.
Both those games were a little unusual in that Italy and Nigeria actually
tried to engage Spain high up the pitch and did leave space behind them. For
Spain that is a rare experience and against Nigeria it was one with which it
wasn't entirely comfortable, yielding numerous chances, particularly in the
first half, that better finishing might have punished. It may be that Spain, as
Barcelona did against Bayern Munich last season, is not very good at defending
-- or at least not at defending in the sense of thwarting an opponent coming at
it. It seems to happen often with gifted possession sides that they get so used
to defending with the ball, reducing the risk by denying the opponent the ball,
that they effectively forget the mechanics of what to do when they don't have it
and an opponent does attack them -- and of course Alba and Gerard Pique are
both Barca players.
But what Alba offers is a player who can arrive at pace onto a sideways pass,
and so turn horizontal movement into vertical movement. There are, essentially,
two ways to beat a massed defense: go round it or go through it: Alba has the
pace to create overlaps -- and conveniently does so on the left, where Spain,
with Cesc Fabregas and Andres Iniesta sharing the midfield and forward duties,
are naturally narrow -- and he can also go through by dint of coming from deep
positions.
Just as importantly, Alba can actually defend. Dani Alves performs a similar
role on the right for Barcelona (and it may be that against better opponents
Barca decides next season it must temper the attacking urges of one or the
other) but his defensive inadequacies have regularly been exposed at
international level -- most notably against Paraguay in the 2011 Copa America
when his haplessness made the winger Marcelo Estigarribia look so potent he
earned a move from the French second division side Le Mans (who had loaned him
out to Newell's Old Boys in Argentina) to Juventus.
Alves hasn't yet been exposed in the Confederations Cup, although with he and
Marcelo (who may be even worse defensively) both pushing up, Brazil looks
horribly vulnerable to counterattacks that hit it wide. Del Bosque,
instinctively cautious, counters that threat by balancing Alba with Alvaro
Arbeloa on the right. Arbeloa seems almost archaic now, a fullback who actually
defends, but he is key to how Spain play, often shuffling across to function
almost as a third center-back (a role Sergio Busquets can also fill, dropping
back from deep midfield) when Alba advances.
Much has been made of the success of Spain at youth level, which seems to
suggest its success will endure. Perhaps the most alarming aspect for the rest
of the world, though, is that the team those players will break in to has been
together so long, has evolved so smoothly, that it has the rhythm and internal
balance of a club side.