RHE's Wondrous Spanish World Cup Preview: Return of the 10s!
Hello, ducklings, let's discuss Spain, shall we?
Spain, of course, were the darlings of world football as this decade began. After winning their first major tournament in 44 years at Euro 2008, they won the 2010 World Cup and repeated as European champions in 2012.
Then, of course, came the disastrous 2014 World Cup, where Iker Casillas' legacy underwent a painful real-time reevaluation. Spain looked set to rebound at the 2016 Euros, but allowed themselves to slip to second in Group D with a loss to Croatia in the last game and then lost toothlessly to Italy in the first knockout round. Nevertheless, I think Spain is as good on paper as any team in the tournament, but they are, somewhat inexplicably to me, coming in rated just below the main favorites of Germany, France, and Brazil. I think Spain are being consistently undervalued, particularly as compared to, say, France. Let's look at the details. As before, likely starters are in
bold and toss-up starters are in
italics.
Formation: My best guess is a 4-1-4-1. Spain's strength is in the midfield and I expect them to set up to maximize possession and playmaking. They could, however, choose to play in a 4-3-3 as they have included some wide options if they want to be a little more direct.
Goalkeeper: David DeGea , Pepe Reina, Kepa Arrizabalaga
We could put DeGea's name in bold 72pt type. Unless he loses a limb, he's playing. He has now reached the stage where you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who doesn't name him the best goalkeeper in the world. He has no weaknesses anymore. Where he was once a bit weak on crosses, he now commands his area well. His distribution is as good as any keeper likely to start (Ederson's other-worldly distribution is better, but he is not likely to start for Brazil). His positioning is excellent. But all that takes a back seat to his pure shot-stopping. In the modern era, all goalkeepers are expected to be good shot-stoppers. But DeGea is a freak. He has an uncanny knack to get a hand or a leg onto the ball in an instant. He makes more "double-saves" than any keeper I can remember. His importance to Man United cannot be overstated, with advanced metrics suggesting he saved 8 to 10 goals compared to an "average" EPL keeper. Even in a short format tournament, we can expect him to save a goal or two.
Defense: Gerard Pique, Sergio Ramos, Dani Carvajal, Jordi Alba, Nacho Monreal, Cesar Azpilicueta, Nacho Fernandez, Alvaro Odriozola
This is the most accomplished and experienced back four in the tournament. Each presumptive starter is a consensus top-5 player in the world at his position and they all have experience playing with one another. Ramos will almost certainly infuriate at least one team's fan base. He'll also almost certainly pop up for one vital set piece goal in the tournament. There was a time I would have worried that Alba would get caught upfield, but he's throttled those instincts back a bit and become a slightly less exciting player, but a more reliable one. The reserves might not matter, but I do note that the inclusion of Nacho Monreal over Marco Alonso suggests that they're looking for stability and versatility (both Monreal and Azpilicueta are capable CBs in a 3 man back line) rather than more attacking thrust.
CM/DM -- Sergio Busquets, Koke, Thiago Alcantara, Saul
Like the five behind him, Busquets is pretty much an auto-start. He is perhaps no longer everyone's pick as the best #6 in the world, but he remains absurdly important to all Spain and Barcelona do. His positioning is impeccable and his passing is flawless. Xavi famously said he has the best first touch at Barcelona. He simply can't be rattled or pressed into mistakes. When you consider that Pique and Ramos are also clean passers, it makes it extremely difficult to keep Spain from playing cleanly out of the back and keeping possession at will. The three reserves are more box-to-box, high energy midfielders. My guess is that you'd see one of these, perhaps Koke? come in for one of the attacking midfielders/wingers when Spain has a lead and wants to kill a game off.
AMs/Wingers/Forwards -- Isco, Andres Iniesta, David Silva, Diego Costa, Rodrigo, Iago Aspas, Marco Asensio, Lucas Vasquez
Yes, I think Spain will, at least some of the time, play 3 attacking playmakers. Isco has been amazing for the national team. Iniesta is still Iniesta. David Silva has quietly racked up 118 caps for the most decorated national team of his era. And he's capable of playing nominally on the left flank. I expect two out of the three forwards (Costa, Rodrigo, Aspas) to play. I love that Aspas is no longer just a guy I cite along with Fabio Borini and Lazar Markovic to bust
@The Gator's balls. He's been the top native Spanish scorer in La Liga for two straight seasons. And while he is mostly a 9, he can play out right if necessary. Rodrigo is the most versatile forward. He plays all three forward positions, and I like him on the right as an inverted winger with a strong left foot. Vasquez is the most traditional right winger and Asensio could get in if they just want to go all playmakers and take the air out of the ball.
Predicted Lineup:
DeGea
Carvajal Ramos Pique Alba
Busquets
Rodrigo Isco Iniesta Silva
Aspas
Predicted finish: If I could only bet on one team, I'd bet on Spain. Winner, winner pollo dinner!