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Spain
players hail their fans after victory over Russia.
Second-half
goals from Xavi Hernández, Daniel Güiza and David Silva sent
Spain through to a UEFA EURO 2008™ final meeting with
Germany as Luis Aragonés's men proved too strong for Russia
in Vienna.
Spain
fluent
Russia
looked the team to beat as they scythed through the
Netherlands in the last eight. But with thunderstorms
lighting the sky above the Ernst-Happel-Stadion they
struggled to get to grips with the occasion, and never
looked like recovering after Xavi broke the deadlock five
minutes after half-time, steering Andrés Iniesta's fine
left-wing cross past Igor Akinfeev. Güiza added another with
17 minutes remaining before Silva completed a
morale-boosting win for Spain ahead of Sunday's final, their
first since 1984.
Russian
torpor
After their
4-1 defeat by Spain in the group stage 16 days ago, Russia
coach Guus Hiddink had complained that he would have to
"wake some players up". He seemed to have succeeded in
breathtaking fashion, yet despite the driving rain and
spectacular lightning that greeted the start of this
semi-final, his charges looked to have slipped back into a
torpor. It was not something that was troubling Sergio
Ramos, though. Stung by criticism of his campaign to date in
some quarters the Spain right-back started like a man
possessed. He snapped into tackles, scampered down the wing
and just failed to get on the end of Xavi's fifth-minute
cross.
Akinfeev
busy
Ramos's
team-mates soon took his lead, and as much as Aragonés does
not like what he terms Spain's "mustard" away jerseys, he
would have been glad his team were not in red. Disjointed at
the back and sluggish in midfield, Russia were struggling to
find their feet. It took a well-timed tackle from Vasili
Berezutski – playing instead of the suspended Denis Kolodin
– to deny Fernando Torres a run on goal though the striker
soon tested Akinfeev with a shot on the turn. The Russia
goalkeeper was in action again to deny David Villa as he
fired in at the near post as Aragonés' ploy of using Iniesta
to double up on the left wing caused confusion.
Pavlyuchenko chances
Russia were
looking for Andrei Arshavin to lift them out of the mire but
refuge instead came from the right boot of Roman
Pavlyuchenko. The 26-year-old gave warning with a free-kick
and it then took a stunning stop from Iker Casillas to deny
him, diverting a blistering strike away from the top corner.
It soon got better for Russia as the instigator of that
group stage loss, hat-trick hero Villa, limped off and
almost immediately Pavlyuchenko poked wide with the goal at
his mercy. The profligacy was underlined five minutes after
half-time when Spain's midfield Argus Marcos Senna turned
over possession and fed Xavi. A smart exchange of passes
later and La Furia Roja were ahead.
Güiza
strikes

David
Silva scores Spain`s third goal.
In the
crowd, Spain's Crown Princess Leticia bore a shocked
expression but in truth it had been coming, and her side
were soon on the hunt for more. Having found his range with
the goal, Iniesta released Villa's replacement Cesc Fàbregas,
and though the substitute ran out of space, Aragonés's
decision to switch to a five-man midfield was proving
profitable. It took an excellent challenge from Yuri Zhirkov
to deny Torres before Fàbregas and Xabi Alonso had efforts
tipped over. Alonso had been introduced moments earlier
alongside Güiza, and the latter soon sealed victory, lobbing
Akinfeev after being put through by Fàbregas'
perfectly-weighted dink over the defence. The No10 was the
provider again moments later as his low cross was fired in
by Silva. Next up, Germany. |