Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

With Iniesta, an era ends for Spain

- Bhargab Sarmah

MOSCOW: With Andres Iniesta, who retired from Spain duty on Sunday, a generation and a way of playing football may have, well, passed.

For years, Spain prided themselves on their possession-based game. At the heart of the idea were Barcelona mates Iniesta and Xavi, torch-bearers of tikitaka, a term that became part of football’s lexicon. Spain ruled football from 2008 to 2012 winning a World Cup on either side of two Euros.

Since then, La Roja have failed to make the quarter-finals of the three major tournament­s they have played in. After Chile’s furious pace and their relentless pressing had Spain reeling, Xavi moved on in 2014. Like Iniesta against Russia on Sunday, the pass master had started on the bench at Rio’s Maracana.

Unlike against Chile, Spain had the lion’s share of the ball here. They completed 1031 passes which was two more than what Russia had made in four games. And yet they are going home with the gnawing feeling that relentless passing is a concept of limited effectiven­ess against teams that can organise their defence with five men and sit deep. Russia entered the quarter-finals making a mere 202 passes on Sunday.

UNDYING CLASS

The midfielder may be 33 and age may have taken toll on his body and stamina, but he can still dance his way past defenders and carve out spaces that others cannot.

Spain have many talented midfielder­s lined up, but none seems as graceful or precise as Iniesta.

HISTORY MAKER

Iniesta undoubtedl­y ended up scoring the most important goal in Spanish football history. With great calm and composure, he slotted home in the 116th minute against the Netherland­s in the final of the 2010 edition to win

Spain their maiden

World Cup title.

Their campaign in

Russia showed dearth of players in the same mould, which is likely to sound the death knell for tiki-taka.

END OF TIKI-TAKA?

Iniesta and Xavi were the orchestrat­ors of Spain’s dominance over world football with their short-passing style of play. With their tactics revolving around their swift passing game, Spain triumphed at the 2010 World Cup and Euro 2012.

Xavi quit internatio­nal football in 2014 and now Iniesta’s retirement certainly marks an end of the tiki-taka era, as the next generation does not seem to follow that style of play. Busquets, Xabi Alonso, Silva, Cesc Fabregas and Javi Martinez, among others in midfield, Spain dominated and delivered through tiki-taka. But when Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan famously defeated Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona in the 2010 Champions League semi-final, it was evident that there were ways around tiki-taka.

GUARDIOLA ADAPTS, SPAIN DO NOT

Guardiola subsequent­ly adapted, at Bayern Munich and now at Manchester City. His City side got an injection of pace and is powerful on the flanks along with its ability to control the ball. In short, it is vastly different from the great Barcelona teams Guardiola developed.

Spain, however, haven’t evolved at the same pace. As their last three tournament­s have shown, teams are more comfortabl­e playing against Spain than they were a decade back. Like Germany, Spain too relied on the old guard. Apart from the retiring duo of Iniesta and Gerard Pique, Sergio Ramos, Silva and Busquets have been part of the core in recent years. However, Thiago wasn’t called upon and neither was Saul Niguez, who has been everpresen­t in Atletico Madrid’s midfield for the past four seasons. Saul had managed just one start in Spain’s entire qualifying campaign.

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