07 July, 2010

Quick Pick: Spain will find its Mojo

Spain v. Germany

This game looks like a final. It certainly has the pedigree — three-time champions Germany have made the semifinals in each of the last four World Cups; and perennial underachievers Spain have seemingly shrugged off their historical albatross, advancing to this, their first ever semifinal.

These two teams met in the final of Euro 2008, which served as Spain's coming out party. There, Spaniards beat Germans 1–0, a score line that said little about the way the former dominated the latter. Francisco Torres, much maligned in this tournament for not finding the back of the net, scored the game-winner two years ago, and looked threatening throughout.

At the beginning of the tournament I was quick to discount Germany's four-goal tally against Australia for lack of a quality opponent. And their supposed dismantling of England in truth looked more like the shuffling around of already broken pieces. But Germany's dominating win over Argentina, a team team blessed with abundant skill and, more importantly, riding high on confidence, was the real-deal. And, perhaps a result of their uncharacteristic youth, they do not lack for style and pace.

Still, for me, Spain will find a way. Their patience and confidence on the ball makes for a 90-minute master class in passing football. Their back-four keeps the ball better than most midfielders in the world—this group includes Gerard Pique, perhaps my favorite player at the World Cup, and the defender I always wished I could be. Until they struggled to find their trademark rhythm against Paraguay in the quarterfinals, they have looked like the best team in the tournament every time they stepped out on the field ... and that includes the opening game they lost to Switzerland, where they fell victim to Swiss opportunism and their own indifferent finishing.

It's that tendency in Spain to do the bare minimum that surely has Spanish fans nervous in the face of Germany's intimidating power and ruthless finishing. The question at hand may be style—Mediterranean panache pitted against Teutonic pragmatism—but it shouldn't be. It will matter little how stylishly the Spaniards pass the ball if the Germans take advantage of whatever handful of chances will inevitably fall their way. The stakes are zero-sum at this stage, the team with three World Cups to their name knows that well; so, too, should the team that has been repeatedly knocked out despite high expectations: lose one game and you're on a familiar flight home. Whether Spain can implement the lessons from generations of not-good-enough, as well as those learned in the Euro 2008 triumph, will make all the difference.

I still think Spain is the best team at the tournament — the most fun to watch and, when they're in the mood (admittedly rarely during this tournament), among the most dangerous attacking teams in the world. While I expect Germany to test Spain, I also expect them to bring out the killer instinct that has been missing from the Spanish side. Spain 3–1 Germany.

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