Welcome to Euro2008 Statistics, which will bring you the latest news, reviews, and most importantly opinion on Euro 2008 from across the web.
We’ll be collating the hype surrounding the upcoming championships, blasting the rumours and bringing you statistical truth, supported by the Castrol Performance Index.
Euro 2008 may feel long gone for most of Europe now, but one can bet that the celebrations are still reverberating around Spain like the proverbial bull in a 5-a-side court… and it is our good pal ‘beano’ at ‘beano blog’ who has ‘been’ in touch with this rather incredible video he took in the Plaza Zorrila in Valladolid as Spain won the Euro 2008 championships…. In his words “the whole place went bananas.” He’s not wrong… Turn your speakers down for this one!
“As a result most teams are now playing five in midfield and the key to success is having players that can cover the most ground. In the final last night, Xavi, today voted as player of the tournament, ran more than any other player (11,446 m). Alongside the Barcelona midfielder, Marcos Senna (10,036m), Andres Iniesta (9,595m) and Cesc Fabregas (8006m), who was only on the pitch for 63 minutes, were also key to the Spanish victory.” For more information pop along over here.
And finally for today, but do come back tomorrow because by goodness there will be more, let’s push over to footy-boots.com, who have gone-a-furrowing amongst the Castrol stats to answer the age old tournament questions. Which player is the quickest? Who covered the most ground during a match? Who’s our player of the tournament so far?I could give you the answers, butfar more fun to pop over there right now and find out for yourself.
Would Xavi Hernandez please step forward! With several stunning performances where he helped the new European champions absolutely boss the midfield, it is with delight we can confirm that the Barcelona-based hero has been voted player of the tournament. Congratulations sir – and although he may not be the obvious choice, we at euro2008statistics.com, as well as the Spanish football blog, think that Xavi is a fine choice.
According to those folks over at the CPI, Xavi was “one of the key men in the winning side, offering a consistently creative presence during the campaign” – and just look at these stats to prove it.
Most importantly, Xavi’s influence grew as the tournament progressed and it was he who broke the deadlock in the semi-final against Russia. He then created Fernando Torres’ winning goal in the final to end the long Spanish international trophy drought. Incredible work….
It’s been 34 years since they last won anything of note, but tonight let the world sing Viva Espana! Because Spain are champions of Europe, and oh how they deserved it. Dominating this game like they have so many others during the tournament – what better way to celebrate Aragones’ 70th birthday than with such an assured performance. It’s testament to quality football winning out over a team who ust, quite frankly, were not good enough!
There aren’t any stats to really exemplify how much Spain dominated the previously un-dominat-able (it’s a word!) Germans. They didn’t run as far, they didn’t have more of the ball, they weren’t caught offside the most (a sure sign of an attacking team). And yet they triumphed quite beautifully. Pass and move. Score one and win. Game over. Now sit back and bask in the Iberian glory.
Let’s ignore for a minute Fernando Torres’ new Clark Kent hairstyle, and the fact that (as Mrs. Tom so helpfully pointed out ‘These two sides haven’t got those funny numbers on their backs’), Germany are being shown exactly how to play football in this Euro 2008 final. Pass and move, the quintessential tactic that defines the game is very much front and centre in Spain’s game, with the German defence struggling to cope with the diagonal play of the speedy Spanish.
The story of the half shows exactly 50:50 possession, but the telling stat is the shot tally. Spain have fired off 6 shots to Germany’s 2. TWO. In 45 minutes. As Ray Stubbs so eloquently put it just now on the BBC ‘Spain will reaaly kick themselves if they don’t win it from here.’
It’s the big one alright, the one we’ve all been waiting for, the one that the previous 30 games have all been about. It’s the game when the great and the good of World football and politics (well, Platini and Angela Merkel anyway) are bound to be in the stands. Predicted by Castrol way back in May, the Spain/Germany final is the match that most neutrals would have thought would be the ultimate game. Unless they were Italian. Or French. Or Dutch.
According to the Edmonton Sun, though, Germany’s talismanic captain and most hard-working player throughout the whole tournament might not be available due to a mystery calf injury. They quote coach Joachim Loew as saying ‘We don’t know how he got injured’, but here at Euro2008statistics, we’d say it has something to do with the massive distances he has been covering every game.
The Castrol Index boys have pulled out some fascinating stats in the lead up to this clash, including the fact that Schweinsteiger’s two goals since coming back from his suspension have both been from Podolski crosses played from virtually the exact same blade of grass.
They also highlight the fact that the finalists didn’t get there by fluke, scoring 11 (Spain) and 10 (Germany) goals. There is a difference in how they got them, though, with Spain taking 83 shots on goal (at a conversion rate of 13.25%) and the German side netting theirs from 53 shots – at a higher rate of success (18.52%). So while Spain go for a shoot on sight approach, the Germans seem more clinical as to when they choose to pull the trigger.
So let’s see what tonight brings. Hopefully it won’t be a cagey 0-0 and Spain’s more balls-out attacking approach will force the Germans to play a more open game. What price penalties, then?
It’s all about Cesc today, with bloggers falling over each other to come up with the most sickeningly sycophantic headline – the favourite being ‘The Joy of Cesc’. Oh those witty, witty sub-editors. In proper blogging, 4thegame provide a look at what happened in the match, and whilst they do pay homage to old Fabber - saying he ‘dictated the game’ - they don’t go overboard extolling Cesc’s virtues with fancy wordplay. See? It’s easy to say someone’s good without drooling.
Possibly one excuse for the Russian team not turning up last night was the promise of ‘socialite’ (whatever one of those is, I want to be one!) Pyotr Listerman to provide the team two girls each for every goal they scored as reported by John Williams from Buzzin Football. With minds probably in the gutter, there was no way they were going to make a decent fist of taking Spain apart, and they were split wide open by a thrusting Iberian team. It’s common knowledge that pimpin’ ain’t easy (especially when you look like a sweaty 14-year old boy like Arshavin), so with such a lacklustre display Russia saved old Pyotr a tough task.
Nick from the Russian page of the World Cup Blog site reckons the team can hold their heads up high and be proud of what they achieved. He mentions that the ‘midfield and attacking line did not hold up’ as well the defence did, and he says that without Iganashevich and V. Beresutski Spain could have had a whole lot more joy in front of goal.
Well you can’t argue with 7 goals in 2 games, and once again the Spanish showed their class in clinically dispatching a side who knew their footballing beans… But were no match for Aragones and his lads, who may well go into Sunday’s finals as slight favourites against the Germans.
We shall see - but in the mean time, just take a look at the Castrol Index statistics from tonight, and make up your own mind who deserved to win.