
Italy
advanced to the Euro 2016 quarter-finals with a stunning 2-0 win over
holders Spain in Paris. Their manager Antonio Conte is providing a
tantalising glimpse of what he can bring to Chelsea, writes Nick Wright.
There was a moment in the second half at the Stade de France which showed
exactly what Conte is all about. An Italy interception fell to Emanuele
Giaccherini in Spain territory, but his poor control sent the ball rolling
towards his manager. It was an innocuous error, but Conte was incensed at
the missed counter-attacking opportunity. With a wild swing of his right
foot, he hoofed the ball away in a screaming rage.
Conte's intensity makes Jose Mourinho look breezy. The Italy boss prowled
his technical area from the first whistle to the last against Spain,
bellowing instructions and demanding constant focus and dedication. His
players have come to expect nothing less. "He is a very particular manager,"
said Daniele de Rossi recently. "He takes a lot of care about every single
detail."
That attention to detail has been plain to see at Euro 2016. Italy stunned
Belgium with an outstanding team performance in their Group E opener in
Lyon, and Conte's masterclass in Paris was even better. For the Chelsea
supporters waiting to welcome him to Stamford Bridge next season, the
excitement is building with every viewing.
Consider first how little was expected of this side. Conte's central
midfield was ripped out by injuries to Marco Verratti and Claudio Marchisio
in the months leading up to the tournament, and bookmakers rated them as
18-1 outsiders for the trophy. In Italy, some even questioned whether the
Azzurri would make it out of their group.
In the absence of star quality, however, Conte's tactical acumen and
man-management have taken over. Italy are brilliantly organised. The 3-5-2
system offers flexibility in defence and attack, and the players give
everything. "Everyone wants to give 100 per cent for him every time," said
Matteo Darmian. "He is someone who gives every one of his players total
confidence whatever they are asked to do."
That attitude is typified by Giaccherini. The 31-year-old midfielder
couldn't hold down a starting place at Sunderland in 2014/15, but he is
playing above himself under Conte. He scored Italy's opener against Belgium,
and he covered a staggering 13km against Spain. "Conte is a strong manager
in every way," he said last week. "He is a manager the players love to play
for."
Much has been made of Leonardo Bonucci, Giorgio Chiellini and Andrea
Barzagli's excellence in defence, but Italy's offensive quality has been
equally impressive. Conte's men tore into Spain from the first minute at the
Stade de France, with wing-backs Mattia De Sciglia and Alessandro Florenzi
wreaking havoc on the flanks and Graziano Pelle making his presence felt up
front.
Spain would have been dead and buried at half-time had it not been for
goalkeeper David de Gea, and at the other end they found it impossible to
break Italy down. Vicente del Bosque's men only mustered two shots in the
first 45 minutes, and they didn't enjoy their usual dominance of possession
either, with Italy having an even share of the ball before the break.
Conte had identified stopping Sergio Busquets as the key to stopping Spain.
The Barcelona midfielder's distribution from deep is vital for La Roja, so
Conte instructed Pelle and Eder to close him down at every opportunity. It
was a shrewd move. Busquets averaged over 80 passes per game in the group
stage. Against Italy, he only managed 51.
With Busquets stifled, Spain were unable to build with their usual fluency,
and when their attacks broke down, Italy were set up to counter-attack in
numbers. Conte had kept his players fresh by making eight changes in their
final group game against the Republic of Ireland, and in stoppage time they
still had the energy to pour forward for Pelle's breakaway second.
It was the culmination of a meticulously-devised game plan. "Mr Conte is so
important as a coach because he can implement a game plan and he becomes
more important with every match," said Bonucci after the game. "This
national team is shorn of great talent so we must play as a team, with a
playing style. Conte is the master at that."
The master added his own thoughts. "Right from the outset I have said that
the only route forward to achieve a semblance of success is to try and be a
like a club team," he said. "There is no point in hiding it, this is not the
rosiest period for Italy in terms of talent. We have been working very
intensively for a month now, tactically and physically, in a bid to surprise
people and we have already succeeded that."
The hard work will continue against world champions Germany in the
quarter-finals, but Chelsea fans have already seen enough. After a chaotic
2015/16 season, they can approach the new Premier League campaign with
optimism and excitement about what their new manager will bring.