The Mercury News

Spain, Italy rolling into Euro 2020 semifinals

- By Steve Douglas

LONDON >> Luis Enrique thought for a couple of seconds, looked straight back at the questioner, and gave the curtest of replies.

“No,” said the Spain coach, with the blankest of looks on his face, after being asked if he had seen a better team than his at the European Championsh­ip.

An answer out of blind loyalty? Perhaps.

Or was it the fact that Spain is the leading scorer at Euro 2020? Maybe.

Or the fact that La Roja is on an unbeaten streak stretching back to October, a run of 13 games? Quite possibly.

Spain’s opponent in today’s European Championsh­ip semifinals might have something to say about all that.

Italy, another of the continent’s traditiona­l powers, brings an even better run of form to Wembley Stadium — a national-record 32 matches unbeaten, going all the way back to September 2018.

From the moment tenor Andrea Bocelli cleared the field at Stadio Olimpico after his stirring rendition of “Nessun Dorma” at the opening ceremony, making way for the start of the tournament, the Italians have been right on the money.

Three impressive wins in the group stage, without conceding. A gutsy victory over a better-than-expected Austria in the round of 16. The eliminatio­n of top-ranked Belgium in the quarterfin­als.

Maybe Luis Enrique isn’t aware, but Italy is rolling at the moment.

This might be a match between teams who have almost forgotten what it feels like to lose — Spain has only one defeat in its last 29 games — but Italy looks to have the edge, at both ends of the field.

Much has changed since Roberto Mancini took charge in May 2018, with the team having evolved into a highenergy

unit that presses hard and attacks at pace. But the Azzurri’s defense needs little introducti­on.

Formidable center backs Leonardo Bonucci and Giorgio Chiellini are still holding the fort, like they have been for more than a decade, and Italy has conceded only two goals so far.

Spain’s defense, on the other hand, is a work in progress while center back Aymeric Laporte integrates following his switch of nationalit­y from France.

In attack, striker Alvaro Morata continues to frustrate for Spain, which needed a penalty shootout to get past Switzerlan­d in the round of 16, and Luis Enrique has seemingly yet to settle on his preferred wingers. Italy, though, has had strong and reliable performanc­es from striker Ciro Immobile and wide forward Lorenzo Insigne, the scorer of the decisive second goal against Belgium.

It’s in midfield where Spain can seriously challenge Italy, potentiall­y making it the department where the match could be won or lost. Jorginho, Nicola Barella and probably Marco Verratti for Italy versus Sergio Busquets, Pedri Gonzalez and Koke for Spain is a must-watch duel all by itself.

Neither team has made it this far in a major internatio­nal competitio­n since 2012, when they met in the European Championsh­ip final in Kyiv. Spain won that match 4-0.

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