BEIJING, June 6 -- Spain set off for the European
Championship on Thursday under no illusions.
"The moment of truth has arrived," striker Fernando
Torres said.
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Spain midfielder Xavi Hernandez (right)
dribbles past Oguchi Onyewu of the US to score the only goal during their
international friendly match at the Sardinero Stadium in Santander on
Wednesday.(Photo; Shanghai Daily) Photo
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As
so often before, Spain departed for a major tournament to the screams of
optimistic fans and rated one of the favorites to lift the title. The challenge,
as it always seems to be, is to avoid its near traditional stumble under
pressure and please all those who want to see a talented squad fulfill its
potential.
The 23-man squad left the airport at the northern
city of Santander backed noisily by supporters even though it only scraped
through its final Euro 2008 warmup match 10 hours earlier with a 1-0 victory
against the United States.
Spain is considered one of the favorites going into
the June 7-29 tournament in Austria and Switzerland after its sixth straight
victory stretched a near 20-month unbeaten run to 16 games.
But unless the Spanish, whose sole major trophy came
from this same competition 44 years ago, can get their act together in time for
their opening Group D match against Russia on Tuesday, the cries will turn into
the familiar ones of anguished fans mourning another disappointment.
Xavi Hernandez's impressive 78th-minute solo effort
salvaged a disorganized win in the team's second and final warmup for the
tournament, the first being a last-gasp 2-1 win against Peru on Saturday.
The 21st-ranked Americans then held the advantage for
the first hour on Wednesday before Spain finally got its stuttering offense
together. Spain, No. 4 in FIFA's world standings, were jeered off at halftime in
a match the Spanish press summed up as boring.
Torres' strike partner David Villa is recovering from
a thigh injury and his progress will be closely watched over the coming days.
Attacking midfielder Andres Iniesta has also recovered from food poisoning and
should start at the Nuevo Tivoli stadium at Innsbruck on Tuesday.
Spain holds perhaps the championship's most potent
attack, which has left the team toying with formations in the buildup.
Regardless of whether it goes with a single striker or a 4-4-2 system against
the Russians, Spain will try not to waver from its strengths in a first-round
group also containing Sweden and defending champion Greece.
Xavi's role could make him even more important than
Liverpool striker Torres.
Torres had the most prolific rookie season in England
by a foreign player with 33 goals but has managed only 15 in 49 for Spain. But
the weight of expectation accompanying the 24-year-old forward hasn't shown,
although coach Luis Aragones has called upon his team to help out its star
player.
In Burghausen, Germany, Russia rallied from an early
deficit and beat Lithuania 4-1 in its final warmup match.
(Source: Shanghai Daily/Agencies)