Spain's coach Vicente Del Bosque kicks the ball during a Group B football match between Spain and Chile in the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro during the 2014 FIFA World Cup on June 18, 2014
Spain became the fifth holders to be eliminated from the World Cup at the first stage after their 2-0 defeat by Chile at the Maracana on Wednesday.
Below five reasons why it all went wrong for the holders in Brazil.
Sticking with the old-timers
After the 5-1 defeat against the Netherlands, coach Vicente del Bosque was forced to react and chose to drop both Xavi Hernandez and Gerard Pique, replacing them with Pedro Rodriguez and Javi Martinez.
However, it would appear that the rejuvenation of the Spain squad
should have begun sooner. A player like Atletico Madrid midfielder Koke,
full of energy and desire, was introduced to the side too late.
And the decision to keep faith in Iker Casillas proved
to be a mistake. The captain of the great teams of the recent past he
may be, but he has not been playing regularly for Real Madrid and Del
Bosque has enough alternatives in the goalkeeping department, even in
the absence of the injured Victor Valdes.
Porous defence
If the fingers of blame are being pointed in his direction, Casillas
might respond by saying that the defenders in front of him deserve
criticism too. After all, Spain's success in 2010 and at Euro 2012 was
based first and foremost around their watertight defence.
The inspiration of Carles Puyol has been missed. Pique and Sergio Ramos worked
in the past as a centre-back pairing, but not this time, and Javi
Martinez did not prove to be the solution against Chile.
Against both the Netherlands and Chile, Spain came up against sides
playing unorthodox formations and couldn't cope to the extent that seven
goals were leaked in two games.
Selecting Diego Costa
Once Del Bosque had persuaded Diego Costa to represent his adopted
country rather than his native Brazil, it was inevitable that the
Atletico Madrid star would have to be brought into the starting line-up.
He looked ill at ease too, and Brazilians unhappy that he snubbed the Selecao greeted him with loud jeers both in Salvador and in Rio de Janeiro.However, Spain have not done enough to help the bruising centre-forward fit into their style of play. He needs balls into space if he is to have an impact, but too often he appeared utterly marooned against Chile and their three central defenders.
Failure to adapt
In general, Spain have been guilty of keeping too much faith in a system
that worked so well in past campaigns. La Roja's way of playing has
been built around the Barcelona way that delivered them so much success
under Pep Guardiola.
But Barcelona's recent fall from grace and the way in which Guardiola's
Bayern Munich were ripped apart by the pace and power of Real Madrid in
the Champions League semi-finals in the spring have indicated that the
days of 'tiki-taka' may be numbered.
Again on Wednesday, Chile's pace and pressing unsettled Spain, forcing
them to regularly mis-place passes and preventing them from holding
possession, their forte in the past.
Playing in South America
It was always going to be a challenge for a European nation to win the
World Cup on the American continent, something that has never happened
before. The beginning of the end for Spain came at the Maracana a year
ago, where they lost 3-0 to Brazil in the Confederations Cup final, and
the decline has continued.
Every South American side in this World Cup has received formidable
backing from their huge travelling supports. Spain's 5-1 loss to the
Dutch left them needing a result against Chile, but the majority of the
Maracana crowd were behind Jorge Sampaoli's side, making it like a home
game for them.
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