Scottish Daily Mail

MANCINI’S MERRY MEN

AFTER STUFFING TURKEY, WALES MUST NOW TAME...

- By IAN HERBERT

After the euphoria of Baku, Wales last night flew into rome, a city basking in its own football ecstasy. the Azzurri are flying. roberto Mancini has restored the nation’s love of the national side and Gazzetta dello Sport is not the only title purring about the way he has enlisted the nation’s football greats, Daniele de rossi, Gianluca Vialli and Gabriele Oriali to help him to do so.

‘they know how to make the most of technical skills and give space to people of superior quality,’ the paper enthused yesterday, beneath a picture of the quartet in those slate grey blazers which have been the sartorial highlight of the group stages.

But though there are already feverish calculatio­ns in rome about how Italy might best ease a path to the quarter-finals, there is an element of anxiety about Gareth Bale bursting the bubble. ‘On Sunday, we watch out for Bale,’ said federico Chiesa, who may take Lorenzo Insigne’s place in the side if Mancini makes four or five changes, with the team’s qualificat­ion already assured.

Italy’s recent record under Mancini is imperious: 10 straight wins, 965 minutes without conceding and 31 goals scored. But they want to send a message to those who feel they have not been fully tested during that run.

‘they have a lack of intensity, power and pace to be even more dangerous going forward,’ Patrick Vieira said this week. ‘It’s a bit too early to take Italy into considerat­ion and think they can go until the end.’

this wasn’t football politics talking. It was Mancini who brought Vieira to City in 2010.

Mancini is talking Italy down for as long as he still can. ‘At this european Championsh­ip, there are teams like france, Portugal, Belgium, the world champions, european champions or world No1,’ he declared this week. ‘they have developed over the years and have a lot ahead of us. that’s quite normal.’

But he wants to be viewed in exalted company, having found a balance that has taken the side to a level not known for years.

there is an abundance of attacking options. Ciro Immobile had never scored in a tournament for Italy before finding the net in the team’s opening two games. Manuel Locatelli only started against Switzerlan­d as Paris Saint-Germain’s Marco Verratti was injured, and scored twice.

But above all, there has been Jorginho, a player reborn since thomas tuchel joined Chelsea. He is the one who sets the tempo for Italy and engineers the gear shifts. Mancini has found a place for him that few others have managed to do.

All told, it’s a huge challenge for Wales — not least for the defence. they will look to do what they did in Baku on Wednesday — get Bale and Aaron ramsey interlinki­ng and defend in numbers.

If there is a chink of light, then it resides in the pace of Daniel James, whose threat in the 2-0 win over turkey was overlooked as Bale and ramsey ran riot. Can James and ramsey, fed by Bale’s vision, get a run on 34-year-old Leonardo Bonucci and, if he is fit, 36-year-old Giorgio Chiellini? Switzerlan­d need a five-goal swing in their favour to displace Wales in second. Wales only need to avoid a heavy defeat.

that would mean a favourable last-16 clash in Amsterdam next weekend with the runners-up from Group B — likely to be one of finland, russia or Denmark.

russia’s game with Denmark seems key and there are no prizes for guessing who Wales would prefer. they hammered russia 3-0 in the group stage in 2016. Win the last-16 game and they could be back in Baku, perhaps facing Holland.

there is a Wales-esque together-stronger vibe emanating from the Italy camp. ‘there are not just 11 players, but 26,’ said Chiesa. ‘We are here as one to go all the way and reach this dream.’

But the win over turkey has reinvigora­ted Wales, too. there was a scare for the 300 or so travelling fans yesterday when the Italian government was reported to be imposing a fiveday hotel quarantine for British visitors from today. But the cloud passed. Italy will instead introduce this stipulatio­n from Monday, to account for the match.

Win tomorrow and Welsh fans can move in greater numbers, with a last-16 match against Austria or Ukraine at Wembley, allowing thousands of fans to travel across the Severn Bridge.

And James said they had not discounted it. ‘We’re underdogs. We’ve got nothing to lose,’ he said. ‘We don’t fear anyone. We believe we can go and win it.’

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