ANALYSIS – Uruguay were a disaster in their opening game against Costa Rica and today we all found out why – Luis Suarez wasn’t in the side. There were shades of Maradona in his performance, first meeting a brilliantly lofted ball with an outstanding header and then a killer conversion just as England were beginning to dominate after Rooney had stepped in an equaliser. Suarez’s second goal was perhaps his best because it came from nothing – it was pure anticipation, expecting the ball to come and getting into the right place to sink a hapless England. Uruguay didn’t give England the luxury of playing freely like Italy had done in the first game and that approach worked for them for most of the first half, but it wasn’t until a moment of magic from Suarez that they looked like winning. In the second half, Uruguay had several chances – including Suarez catching Joe Hart off his goal line for a second time off a corner – but as long as there was only a single goal between the two England were in with a chance. Trouble is, as Balotelli showed at Manaus, and Suarez did here at Sao Paulo, class counts – and England’s overpaid Premier League players just don’t cut it on the international stage.
ANALYSIS – The warning signs were there as far back as the European Championships in 2012, when those magicians from Spain often looked tired and out of sorts. But their complete destruction of Italy in the final silenced the critics. Spain also lost badly in the Americas Cup Final to Brazil, and it was this defeat that should have sparked a change in Spain’s approach when confronted by teams that play completely with tremendous athleticism and speed to deny their players the room to pass the ball around, tika taka, before inflicting the killer goal.
That they failed to was exposed first by Holland, who as Australia showed later, are not as good as that 5-1 scoreline suggested, and then yesterday against a good but certainly not exceptional Chile side, a defeat that had ensured their early departure from Brazil 2014. There’s something very sad about seeing the end of a great side, perhaps the best side to grace the football pitch since the 1970 Brazilians, a side that would have taught the 1982 Brazilians a lesson or two also. And if this is indeed the end of Spain, who will take up the reins next..that’s the question that’ll be entertaining every football follower for the remainder of this tournament and the rest.