The Citizen (Gauteng)

Italy start tough task

PLAY-OFFS: EUROPEAN CHAMPS FACE UPHILL BATTLE TO MAKE IT TO QATAR

- Milan – AFP

Italy are aiming for World Cup glory despite having to navigate a treacherou­s play-off path in order to get the 2022 tournament, with North Macedonia the first barrier standing in their way.

The European champions begin a potential two-match mini campaign in Palermo tomorrow with missing a second straight World Cup a real possibilit­y, as a trip to either Turkey or Portugal awaits should they get through their semifinal.

However coach Roberto Mancini says he is looking past the playoffs and at Qatar, where the tournament kicks off in November.

“Our goal is to win the World Cup, and to win the World Cup we have to win these two matches. There’s nothing else to say,” Mancini told reporters.

After so-called Notte Magiche (Magical Nights) of Euro 2020, Italy looked certain to banish the ghosts of the disastrous qualifying campaign for 2018 as Mancini’s team not only won, but won playing an expansive style of football rarely associated with the Azzurri.

Those balmy summer evenings soon gave way to a frosty autumn in which Italy drew four of their final five World Cup qualifiers and two missed Jorginho penalties in their two matches with Switzerlan­d cost them an automatic spot.

Italy’s displays in those matches did not live up to the swaggering style which characteri­sed their play right up to their Euro quarterfin­al win over Belgium.

“I’m confident. I have good players, profession­als who from nothing built a victory that nobody believed in beforehand,” added Mancini.

“They managed to form themselves into an extraordin­ary team.

“We need to build our confidence from that, from what we have accomplish­ed.”

Although the manner in which top spot in Group C was handed to the Swiss has caused alarm, Mancini is sticking with the blueprint which brought him triumph at Wembley.

“We don’t have much time to try out new things in training. The basis will the same as in the Euro,” he said.

Italy will likely be missing their entire first-choice back four, with Giorgio Chiellini, Leonardo Bonucci, Leonardo Spinazzola and Giovanni Di Lorenzo all expected to be out of the semi.

Right-back Di Lorenzo was taken out of the picture at the last moment when he limped out of Napoli’s 2-1 win over Udinese last Saturday afternoon, while on the other flank Spinazzola hasn’t played since injuring his Achilles tendon against Belgium in July.

The last time Bonucci played was early March while last Sunday Juve team-mate Chiellini made his first appearance for the best part of two months, in the first half of his team’s 2-0 win over Salernitan­a.

Mancini said he probably would not risk as important a figure as Chiellini for a home match against a team they would expect to dominate, given the tough nature of the final should they get through.

“Giorgio is pretty good, we’ll see if he can play both matches, probably not, but we’ll talk about it together,” said Mancini.

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? ROBERTO MANCINI
Picture: Getty Images ROBERTO MANCINI

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa