Thursday, August 18, 2011

How long will the Spanish dynasty last?

The success and technical expertise of Spain's youth sides suggest the country will rule football for the next decade at least

So what caused the decline? Domenech never seemed an easy fit for the job. The transition from a great generation to the next is never easy. There was, fairly evidently, a loss of hunger from the older, successful generation, and a sense of entitlement from younger players, born into an environment in which winning was the norm. But there was something also about the way the game was played that raised questions about Clairefontaine, something Matt Spiro explains in detail in issue two of The Blizzard.

It is a simplistic theory, but perhaps, particularly at youth level, smaller players have to think more than their larger opponents, and so they develop football intelligence earlier. (England, I note with a shudder, had the tallest squad at the Under-20 World Cup). Since the heyday of Clairefontaine, the offside rule has been radically liberalised, something that has had the effect of stretching the effective playing area from around 35-40 yards to around 60, creating more space and allowing smaller players to play. It could be that French football, quite aside from issues of attitude, was simply bypassed by the evolution of the game.

For now, however, there seems little reason why Spain 's future should not be as bright as its present.

Jonathan Wilson

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