Perhaps this contest was always destined to fall short of its grand billing. Perhaps the ghosts of Brazil still hover too heavily over Spanish shoulders for true invincibility to be spoken of. But whatever illusions remained were stripped bare under the brooding skies of Saint-Denis. Spain—once the game’s high priests—are going home, undone by an Italian side that outmanoeuvred them in nearly every facet save, ironically, the art of finishing.
Had Antonio
Conte possessed a forward in the ruthless tradition of Paolo Rossi or Pippo
Inzaghi, the margin of victory might have been something close to humiliation.
Instead, Italy found themselves clinging on as stoppage time approached, their
earlier dominance fraying at the edges, before Graziano Pellè’s breakaway
volley settled the matter and booked a quarter-final with Germany in Bordeaux.
That they even needed such late insurance spoke less of Spanish threat than of
Italy’s own profligacy.
“We created
so much against a team of superstars—it’s not easy to make that many chances
against Spain,” Conte reflected, the adrenaline of tactical triumph still
evident in his eyes. “Maybe we should have settled it sooner, with Éder through
on goal, that’s our small regret. But the performance was incredible. Apart
from a brief spell in the second half, Spain’s possession never hurt us.”
Indeed, for
long spells the match unfolded like a lesson in how to dismantle a dynasty.
Whether it was the heavy rain that sheeted across Saint-Denis after kick-off,
sending spectators scrambling for higher ground, or simply the weight of
mortality pressing upon them, Spain were curiously meek early on. “We were
timid in the first half,” Vicente del Bosque admitted afterwards, his voice
tinged with resignation. “Better in the second, but only because we had no
choice. Italy were the better team.”
Italy
struck the first chords of menace almost immediately. Within 10 minutes, David
de Gea had twice spared Spanish blushes—first diving low to claw away Pellè’s
header, then reacting instinctively to push Emanuele Giaccherini’s inventive
overhead onto the post. Italy were quicker to every ball, more purposeful
despite a slick surface that made finesse treacherous. Andrés Iniesta tried to
orchestrate from deep, but seemed a conductor marooned too far from his
orchestra.
Italy’s
celebrated defensive iron proved equally unyielding. In three previous matches
only Robbie Brady’s header had breached their lines, and when Cesc Fàbregas
finally found a glimpse of space via David Silva and Nolito, Mattia De Sciglio
stormed from the back line to block—embodying Italy’s creed of collective
vigilance. De Sciglio was everywhere in that opening half: delivering crosses
for Marco Parolo to head wide, tempting Sergio Ramos into near self-sabotage
with a dangerous ball across goal that almost yielded an own goal in his
desperation to deny Pellè.
The
breakthrough felt inevitable. Just past the half-hour, Gerard Piqué felled
Pellè at the edge of the area. Éder’s vicious free-kick skidded off the
drenched turf, De Gea could only parry, and in the ensuing scramble Giorgio
Chiellini lunged ahead of the dawdling Spanish defence to force the ball over
the line. De Gea had done well to stop the initial strike but might rue not
pushing it farther clear.
Italy
protected their lead with a calm that belied the stakes, even threatening more
through Éder and Alessandro Florenzi’s industrious raids that exposed Ramos’
age with every dash. Only a stunning De Gea fingertip kept Giaccherini’s
curling effort from nestling in the top corner before the interval. Buffon, by
contrast, remained largely a solemn spectator—Spain’s array of technicians
reduced to peripheral figures, unable to thread Nolito or Álvaro Morata meaningfully
into the affair.
Del Bosque
responded by withdrawing Nolito at the break for Aritz Aduriz, but though Italy
seemed to grow even more assured, Spain did finally register their first
meaningful threat. Morata’s header from Fàbregas’s cross forced Buffon into
action, albeit an uncomplicated catch. Moments later, De Gea was the saviour
again when Pellè slid Éder clean through on goal. As he has done so often for
Manchester United, De Gea stood tall and blocked, though Éder might reflect
that such generosity has no place at this level.
Italy’s
failure to kill the game—Éder and Giaccherini both spurned presentable
chances—invited Spanish hope. The tension told in Conte, who at one point
launched the ball down the touchline in barely concealed frustration, risking
sanction for time-wasting. Spain, sensing the possibility of theft, pressed
forward: Buffon was forced to claw away stinging efforts from Iniesta and then
Piqué, while Insigne at the other end danced past Ramos to draw another
excellent De Gea save.
Ultimately, it was Pellè who released Italy from their torment, crashing home Matteo Darmian’s deflected cross in stoppage time to settle not just the match but perhaps an era. The 2-0 scoreline was no flattering fiction—Italy had orchestrated it with superior discipline, sharper ideas, and an almost primal hunger.
Now Germany
await in Bordeaux. “They’re a cut above,” Conte admitted without embarrassment.
“The best team here by far. And we’ll face them without Thiago Motta, possibly
without De Rossi. But when the going gets tough, we often find a way to
respond.”
Thus, the
theatre of Saint-Denis witnessed not merely a result but a reckoning. Spain’s
reign—already wobbling since Brazil—was laid bare, while Italy, ever the
tournament alchemists, summoned from grit and guile a performance that hints at
further chapters still to be written. Football’s old truths endure: dynasties
fade, systems falter, but in the crucible of elimination, character has a habit
of prevailing.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar

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