Things will get better under Zidane – Rivaldo urges Real Madrid fans not to panic

The Brazil legend says that the club should not panic despite dropping points over the weekend

Former Brazil star Rivaldo says that he expects Real Madrid to get better under Zinedine Zidane while urging club supporters to not panic just yet.

Real Madrid settled for a stunning 1-1 draw with Real Valladolid this past weekend, dropping the club’s first points in the second match of the club’s La Liga campaign.

While early in the season, the draw did raise doubts that carried over from last season, a campaign that saw Real Madrid go through both Julen Lopetegui and Santiago Solari before re-hiring Zidane to manage the team.

And Rivaldo says Zidane’s return will be enough to lead Real Madrid back to where they belong after settling for a third-place finish last season.

“Even dropping points at home last weekend in La Liga, I don’t see why the club and fans might start to panic, after all we are just starting the league and Barcelona also lost their first game,” Rivaldo told BetFair.

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“Those kind of thoughts should only come after 10 matches or so, and if things are not improving.

“Zinedine Zidane is re-setting his tone on the team and soon things should get better. The club will battle for La Liga and Champions League, but I don’t doubt that they might make a move in the transfer market before the transfer deadline.”

One move that has been talked about has been the pursuit of Neymar, although that pursuit now looks to be all but over with the transfer window winding down.

That move was rumoured to include a swap for Vinicius Junior, with the young Brazilian heading to Paris Saint-Germain to replace his compatriot.

But 2002 World Cup-winner Rivaldo, who earned 74 caps for Brazil, says Vinicius should stay on at Real Madrid and develop under Zidane.

 “Apparently, PSG talked about Vinicius Junior moving from Madrid to France as part of a potential Neymar transfer to Real Madrid deal, but I wouldn’t accept it, if I was Vinicius,” he said.

“Of course, it would depend on the player’s will of playing more often, but he played well last season and should not rush a move, after all he is on the best possible stage to shine at Real Madrid.”

Sanchez lifts lid on his Man Utd frustrations: I'd play 60 minutes then I wouldn't play the next game

The Chile international forward has left Old Trafford for Inter on loan, with a spell in Serie A intended to help him rediscover a lost spark

Alexis Sanchez does not regret his decision to join Manchester United but suggested he became frustrated at not being selected regularly for the Red Devils.

The Chile international found himself struggling for form from the moment he completed a switch from Arsenal in the winter transfer window of 2018.

Despite being a proven performer in the Premier League, Sanchez found it difficult to make his mark in Manchester and saw questions asked of his value on a lucrative contract.

Niggling knocks and an inability to adjust to the demands of his new surroundings have left the South American stuck on five goals in 45 appearances.

That return has led to United sanctioning a loan move to Serie A giants Inter , with the plan being for Sanchez to rediscover his spark in Italy before another call is made on his long-term future.

The 30-year-old forward told BBC Sport on the path his career has taken of late: “I’m very happy I went to Manchester United.

“I’ve always said that. It’s the club that’s won the most in England.

“When I went to Arsenal it was fantastic – I was happy there – but United were growing at the time, they were buying players to win something.

“I wanted to join them and win everything. I don’t regret going there.”

While remaining convinced that he made the right decision, Sanchez started just 31 of 77 possible outings for United and concedes that tactical tweaks left him frustrated at times.

He added: “I think that I’m happy when I play for my national team.

“I was happy at Manchester United too, but I’ve always said to my friends: I want to play.

“If they would let me play I’ll do my best. Sometimes I’d play 60 minutes then I wouldn’t play the next game – and I didn’t know why.”

Sanchez is yet to take in a competitive outing during the 2019-20 campaign, having returned to United over the summer nursing an injury picked up on Copa America duty.

He is adamant that he was ready for international duty, despite the lack of minutes under his belt, and is unsure as to why Ole Gunnar Solskjaer decided to completely overlook him during pre-season and the opening weeks of the new campaign.

Sanchez said: “I felt fine. I think I did well in the Copa America.

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“After that, it [not playing any pre-season games] depended on the coach to let me play. You need to ask him this question, not me.”

Pique wants PSG star Neymar back at Barcelona

The Blaugrana defender discussed his former Brazilian team-mate, who has been linked with a Camp Nou comeback

Barcelona defender Gerard Pique says he would like to see Paris Saint-Germain superstar Neymar return to La Liga champions Barcelona.

The Brazilian forward wants to leave PSG and has been linked with a move back to Barca, two years on from his world-record €222 million (£200m/$246m) transfer.

Real Madrid have also emerged as a possible destination for Neymar before the transfer window shuts on September 2, but Blaugrana centre-half Pique would be happy if the 27-year-old returned to Camp Nou.

“Of course we’d like him to come back,” Pique told “La 1” of Television Espanola.

“But it’s something we can’t control. We’ll leave it in the hands of those who decide [these things] and from there we’ll see in a few days.”

Neymar – who missed the Copa America due to an ankle injury – is yet to feature for Ligue 1 champions PSG this season amid the ongoing speculation over his future.

The Brazilian forward was targeted by PSG fans during the home clash against Nimes on August 11, with banners criticising him for wanting to leave the French capital . 

“He’s thought a lot about everything and he’s done everything right,” Pique added.

Barcelona remain confident they will eventually secure a deal for their former star after face-to-face talks with PSG progressed positively in Paris on Tuesday.

The La Liga champions made an offer comprising of €160 million (£144m/$177m) plus bonuses for the Brazilian, to be paid in three instalments in order to keep in line with Financial Fair Play.

However, PSG are keen on involving Barca full-back Nelson Semedo in the exchange, along with a fee of €100m (£90m/$111m) coming from the Catalan club.

Barcelona would prefer to not part with any of their current squad members, but are optimistic a deal could be imminent within a matter of hours rather than days.

Neymar has scored 34 goals in 37 Ligue 1 appearances despite both his seasons at PSG being interrupted by serious foot injuries.

In total, Neymar has managed 51 goals in 58 games for PSG – who have won two of their opening three Ligue 1 games in 2019-20.

Solskjaer's emphasis on speed is doomed to fail – and cost him Man Utd job

The Norwegian is worryingly obsessed with replicating the tactics employed by his mentor, Sir Alex Ferguson, but the game has changed in recent years

“Pace and power, Man United, that’s what we are,” Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said in January, four matches into his caretaker role at the club.

“When we have players like we have with pace… that’s how we played with Andy Cole, Dwight Yorke, Ryan Giggs, and Becks (David Beckham) down the sides. We attack quickly when you can. That’s my philosophy as well.”

Throughout Solskjaer’s initial run of good results at Old Trafford, this was an effective strategy, the perfect antidote to the rigidity and cautiousness of his predecessor’s tactical approach.

United’s players were instructed to frantically scurry about, their simple mantra – push forward quickly and often – syncing neatly with the inevitable manager bounce following Jose Mourinho’s departure.

Confidence and assertiveness are important psychological components to any attacking strategy, and for a couple of months United looked self-assured under the Norwegian.

But when United’s form dropped off in April and May, Solskjaer’s emphasis on speed began to look hollow.

“That’s always been the way I like to play football,” he said in the same interview in January. “Get the ball up in the opposition’s half as soon as you can, as quickly as you can. If you score, fantastic. If not, then you’ve got to have patient build-up play. But attack quickly.”

All of a sudden those comments read a little vague, a little too focused on the mental aspects of the sport.

Just as Solskjaer’s references to Sir Alex Ferguson in post-match interviews quickly went from charming to grating, his tactical reliance on that treble-winning team lost its veneer of astuteness and began to look one-dimensional.

The problem with basing your tactical philosophy on the 1990s is that it’s currently 2019. Football has changed a lot since Solskjaer’s heyday.

Following a summer of doubling down on pace and power, the good news is that Solskjaer has developed a clear identity in just a few months at the club; succeed or fail, we will know exactly what Solskjaer was trying to build, and exactly on what to judge his tenure. That is no mean feat given the apathy that has engulfed Old Trafford for much of the past six years.

Signing Daniel James, placing trust in Anthony Martial, and heavily involving the club’s academy graduates has created a sense of directional clarity that Solskjaer hopes, following more intense fitness coaching, will make them title challengers within a year or two.

It won’t.

Ferguson’s focus on speed was from a Premier League era of considerably simpler tactics. Matches were more evenly contested, both possession and pressing were sporadic and disordered, and the predominance of basic 4-4-2s betrayed an expectation that individuality would win matches.

By contrast, modern English football is distinctly territorial, with the Big Six expected to hold 60 percent of the ball in games defined by possession versus counters, while attacking interplay is the result of complex tactical organisation – a mixture of high-intensity pressing and intricate passing moves.

The appearance of creative freedom at Manchester City and Liverpool, for example, is actually the product of fastidious systems training, of movements made habit through repetition.

Solskjaer hasn’t been in hibernation these last 20 years and will, of course, be aware of football’s tactical development, and yet United’s 2-1 defeat to Crystal Palace last weekend suggests attacking speed really is his only course of action.

Palace, predictably, sat extremely deep at Old Trafford and, predictably, that completely negated United’s pace in the final third. There was no space for Martial, James, or Marcus Rashford, providing a tactical template for future visitors to Manchester.

It’s pretty simple, really: an era of possession-dominance at big clubs makes emphasis on pure speed redundant.

Solskjaer is not in immediate peril and small tweaks could make a difference, such as sitting Paul Pogba higher up the pitch or giving Juan Mata more minutes in claustrophobic matches such as last weekend’s.

Then again, one of the problems with a loosely structured emphasis on surging into the final third is a susceptibility to the ebb and flow of confidence – hence, the two distinct phases under Solskjaer in the second half of last season. Should more mid-table clubs frustrate Solskjaer’s team, their heads could drop and United – peculiarly prone to collapse – will fall away.

A 4-0 victory over Chelsea on the opening day gave the initial impression that United’s summer was a success and Solskjaer’s approach viable.

But Chelsea’s overly-expansive formation and porous midfield has become an early theme of Frank Lampard’s reign, taking the sheen off United’s start, before alarming performances against Wolves and Palace confirmed Solskjaer’s tactics – and the technical quality of his squad – have scarcely improved since the club won eight points from the final nine matches of last season.

Solskjaer’s obsession with a Ferguson-era ‘United Way’ isn’t just an interview technique, it’s a hazy tactical mantra ill-suited to modern football.

This is just the beginning of a transitional year for the manager, but unless he moves away from pace and power, he is unlikely to last the season.

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'Thank God we have a fit Adrian' – Klopp reveals Alisson is still 'some time' from return

The Liverpool boss is more than happy with his backup goalkeeper as his Brazilian No.1 works his way back to fitness

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp has given his full backing to Adrian after revealing first-choice goalkeeper Alisson is not yet close to a return.

Alisson has been sidelined with a calf injury sustained in the 4-1 win over Norwich City on the opening day of the Premier League season.

No timeframe has been given for the Brazil international’s comeback, but he was moving freely on Thursday when collecting his award for Champions League Goalkeeper of the Season.

Asked for an update on Alisson at Friday’s news conference, Klopp said: “He has made steps, of course, but it was a proper injury, so it will still take time.

“This is how it always is with professional sportsmen – when you have a muscle thing and it takes long, then it takes a while as well until you can bring the muscle to at least the same level as it was before.

“A calf muscle is pretty important for jumping – and for a goalie, it is quite important that you can jump from time to time, so it will take time.”

Adrian has filled the void over the past few weeks and will remain in goal for the trip to Burnley, with Liverpool aiming to make it four wins from four in the Premier League.

“Thank God – and hopefully it stays like this – we have a fit Adrian in the back and now in charge, which is good,” Klopp said.

“So far, I am really happy with everything I saw. He is a good guy, which is important as well, but most importantly of course he can catch balls and that’s good as well.

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“The solution we found for it is really good, but of course it would be better if ‘Ali’ was around but that will still take some time.”

Liverpool recovered from a goal down to beat Burnley 3-1 on their most recent trip to Turf Moor and needed a 90th-minute winner from defender Ragnar Klavan in the 2017-18 season.

“Turf Moor is great. It’s a really tough place to go,” Klopp said. “We have had all weather there! My first game there was one of the hottest days I experienced, then we had wind, rain, everything. It was always difficult.

“Once we played there on January 1, when Ragnar scored in the last minute. That’s how a year should start!

“Life is not easy when you go there. The way they play is pretty clear, they don’t change it a lot but they do it that well that everybody who goes there struggles. 

“I can’t remember any team going there and winning well. [Manchester] City won there last year with a pretty tight decision. That’s what we are prepared for.”

Liverpool teenager Duncan set to complete €2m Fiorentina move

The 18-year-old forward made headlines in August after it was claimed that the Reds’ unwillingness to let him leave was affecting his mental health

Liverpool youngster Bobby Duncan is set to complete a move to Fiorentina after a €2 million (£1.8m/$2.2m) fee was agreed between the two clubs.

La Viola have been chasing the 18-year-old forward throughout the summer, and had a loan bid rejected by the Anfield outfit in August.

But Goal can now confirm that Duncan, who is the cousin of Reds legend Steven Gerrard, will join the Serie A outfit ahead of the 9pm BST (4pm ET) transfer deadline in Italy.

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Liverpool will retain a 20 per cent sell-on clause for a player who was instrumental in them winning the FA Youth Cup last season.

Duncan has only been with the Merseyside club for one year after joining from Manchester City, and was part of Jurgen Klopp’s squad both in the UK and on their tour of the United States during pre-season.

He was thrust into the headlines last week, though, when his agent claimed that Liverpool’s decision not to let him leave the club for Fiorentina was affecting his mental health.

“Bobby has not left his room for four days and will never go back to Liverpool again, and my only concern now is his mental health and well being,” his representative, Saif Rubie, said.

“The Liverpool hierarchy have shown zero consideration to that and have even gone as far as saying in writing that they will punish him and make him stay at the club until January and beyond to teach him a lesson.”

Liverpool responded to the claims, saying they were “unfounded”, but Goal has learned that Duncan did not return to the club following Rubie’s outburst, though they did explain their stance to the player and he leaves with their best wishes.

The Reds’ initial reluctance to let Duncan leave for Florence was due to the loan offer from the Italian side which they felt amounted to no more than a trial.

Fiorentina were offering to take the teenager on a season-long loan with no obligation to buy on a permanent basis while there were no penalty clauses included should the player fail to feature for Vincenzo Montella’s first team.

But following the accusations regarding Duncan’s mental health, Liverpool sporting director Michael Edwards and academy director Alex Inglethorpe have led negotiations to find the best solution for both the player and the club.

Paris Saint-Germain were the ace up my sleeve for Icardi – Wanda Nara

The Argentine striker’s agent and wife says she had the loan to the French capital lined up even though she was not happy about the move

Mauro Icardi’s wife and agent Wanda Nara claims the striker’s loan move to Paris Saint-Germain was an “ace up her sleeve”.

Icardi secured a season-long switch to PSG from Inter on deadline day following much speculation over his future since he had been stripped of the captaincy at San Siro in January and then excluded from training with the rest of the squad this season.

The striker had been linked with Juventus, Napoli, Monaco and Atletico Madrid but agreed a one-year contract extension that keeps him tied to Inter until 2022, though the club have given PSG a reported €70 million option to buy Icardi at the end of the campaign.

The Argentina international’s move to the Ligue 1 champions followed reports his legal team were threatening to sue Inter over his omission from the first team.

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Nara says she always had the switch to Paris lined up even though it is not the ideal scenario for her.

“If I waited until the last moment, it’s because I had an ace up my sleeve,” Nara told Argentine show Morfi Telefe. “Nobody knew, not even the kids. Mauro packed a small suitcase and left the rest to me.

“The kids go to school in Italy, so we’ll live between Milan and Paris. Of the three options we had, PSG was the worst for me, because I have to go back to live in Milan with the kids.

“But I thought of what was best for him. There were many important Italian clubs who wanted him and it would’ve been easier.”

The 26-year-old, who has scored 124 goals in 219 appearances for the Nerazzurri, did not feature for Antonio Conte’s side during pre-season or the opening two games of Inter’s Serie A campaign after being told he could leave.

He could be in contention to feature for PSG against Strasbourg on September 14, before Thomas Tuchel’s side take on Real Madrid in their opening Champions League group match.

'He always stays calm' – Van Dijk backs de Ligt following shaky Juve start

The defender has remained calm despite his difficult debut for the Italian side, according to his Netherlands team-mate

Virgil van Dijk backed Netherlands team-mate Matthijs de Ligt to be unaffected by a shaky Serie A debut for Juventus.

Former Ajax defender De Ligt received criticism for his performance in Juve’s dramatic 4-3 victory over Napoli on Saturday.

The 20-year-old played alongside Leonardo Bonucci due to Giorgio Chiellini’s anterior cruciate ligament injury but struggled to cope with Napoli’s rampant attack in the second half and was partly at fault for all three goals Juve conceded.

Netherlands coach Ronald Koeman has defended the €75million centre-back, however, and Liverpool star Van Dijk echoed those sentiments.

“I saw Matthijs arrive very normally. Nothing was wrong,” UEFA Men’s Player of the Year Van Dijk told a news conference ahead of Netherlands’ Euro 2020 qualifier with Germany.

“Everybody that knows him also knows that he always stays calm in these kinds of situations.

“Of course, I spoke to him. But we don’t need to tell each other a lot. I think it’s also something you only talk about when you see each other for the first time again.

“After that, the focus is on the future and the match in front of us as a pairing. So that’s what we did.”

De Ligt’s former club-mate Frenkie de Jong also switched to a European heavyweight in the offseason by joining LaLiga champions Barcelona, though the midfielder has been used in a slightly different role to the one he played for Ajax and typically occupies for the Netherlands.

“No, not at all. Those guys are amazing, they know that and we do too,” Van Dijk said when asked if extra work was required to accommodate the duo in Netherlands’ system.

“I think they will show why they are so important to us once again.”

Koeman, meanwhile, refuted the suggestion Netherlands will be feeling extra pressure following their 3-2 home defeat to Germany in March.

“There’s always pressure on us. Especially now against Germany,” Koeman said. “From the outside, it may seem as though we have some pressure on our shoulders, because of our most recent meeting.

“We still have some spare games. I believe we can take a big leap with a good result against Germany tomorrow. In that case, the rest of the qualification will be a bit easier. If not, reaching the Euros should still be our main target, of course.”

Maradona hired by struggling Argentine club Gimnasia

The Albiceleste legend has been hired by the last-placed side, having most recently coached Mexican second-division side Dorados

Argentina legend and former Albiceleste head coach Diego Maradona has been hired at Argentine club Gimnasia de La Plata.

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Maradona returns to coaching on a one-year contract in his first job since departing Mexican second division club Dorados in June.

He takes over for Dario Ortiz, under who Gimnasia had endured a miserable start to the season.

The club had taken just one point in their first five games, and sit rock-bottom of the Argentine top-flight in 24th place.

It will represent a very difficult third coaching stint in the Argentine professional leagues, following his time at Deportivo Mandiyu and Racing Club in 1994 and 1995 respectively.

The Argentina legend has struggled to find his footing in coaching, with his tenure at most jobs rarely lasting beyond a season.

His longest spell as a head coach came in charge of Argentina, leading the national team from July 2008 through 2010, guiding them to the quarter-finals of the World Cup in South Africa.

Maradona was appointed head coach Al-Wasl in May 2011, but was sacked by the Dubai club in July 2012.

He then enjoyed a long spell as an assistant at Argentine club Deportivo Riestra from 2013-17, departing to take the job at Fujairah FC.

However, he left after just one season, but went on to enjoy a brief but fairly successful stint at Dorados.

Maradona twice guided the club to the second-division title game after taking over in September 2018.

However, Dorados fell both times at that last hurdle to Atletico San Luis, who earned promotion to Liga MX as a result of those victories.

Maradona entered talks with the club to continue his stay, but ended up departing in June 2019, citing health reasons as he was set to undergo surgeries on his knee and shoulder.

Indeed, his knee has believed to have ended the possibility of him taking over Gimnasia, but negotiations have proved fruitful, with Maradona taking over the Buenos Aires club.

Maradona’s first game in charge is set to be September 15, after the international break, when he will face Racing Club in front of his new supporters.

Romania vs Spain: TV channel, live stream, team news & preview

La Roja are set for an emotional return to action in Bucharest, where they are aiming to maintain a perfect Euro 2020 qualifying record

Spain travel to Romania for their latest Euro 2020 qualifier, which takes place at the Arena Nationala in Bucharest on Thursday.

La Roja have a perfect record so far in qualification, having edged Norway before easily beating Malta, the Faroe Islands and Sweden.

Romania, meanwhile, sit third in Group F, but face an uphill task to qualify, having picked up six of their seven points against whipping boys Malta and the Faroes.

Game Romania vs Spain
Date Thursday, September 5
Time 7:45pm BST / 2:45pm ET
Stream (US) fubo TV (7-day free trial)

In the United States (US), the game can be watched live and on-demand with fuboTV (7-day free trial) .

New users can sign up for a free seven-day trial of the live sports streaming service, which can be accessed via iOS, Android, Chromecast, Amazon Fire TV, Roku and Apple TV as well as on a web browser.

US TV channel Online stream
TUDN USA / UniMas fubo TV (7-day free trial)

In the United Kingdom (UK), the game will be shown live on Sky Sports Football and can be streamed via Sky Go Extra.

UK TV channel Online stream
Sky Sports Football Sky Go Extra

Position Romania squad
Goalkeepers Tatarusanu, Nita, Radu
Defenders Chiriches, Grigore, Tosca, Benzar, Nedelcearu, Stefan, Rus
Midfielders Maxim, Stanciu, Deac, Marin, Anton, Hagi, Cicaldau, Paun, Bordeianu
Forwards Grozav, Keseru, Andone, Puscas

Romania have been unable to select Nicusor Bancu and Cristian Ganea due to injury. The former had been named in the original squad but has since pulled out.

Alexandru Chipciu, their most experienced midfielder, is banned after he was sent off against Malta.

With a lack of goals in the squad, much will be expected of Claudiu Keseru and Reading’s George Puscas.

Romania starting XI: Tatarusanu; Nedelcearu, Chiriches, Grigore, Tosca; Benzar, Deac, Marin, Stanciu; Keseru, Puscas

Position Spain squad
Goalkeepers De Gea, Kepa, Pau Lopez
Defenders Carvajal, Llorente, Hermoso, Gaya, Ramos, Alba, Nunez
Midfielders Busquets, Ceballos, Sarabia, Saul, Thiago, Suso, Rodri, Fabian, Parejo, Navas
Forwards Alcacer, Oyarzabal, Rodrigo

Spain boss Robert Moreno has had the luxury of being able to select all of his top stars for the double header against Romania and the Faroe Islands.

Diego Costa, Alvaro Morata and Isco are among those who failed to make the squad, while Unai Nunez of Club Athletic and PSG midfielder Pablo Sarabia are hopeful of making their international bows in the days ahead.

Sergio Ramos is a confirmed starter, despite a recent dip in form, but David de Gea faces a battle from Kepa Arrizabalaga for the No.1 spot.

Spain starting XI: Kepa; Navas, Ramos, Llorente, Alba; Saul, Busquets, Fabian Ruiz; Ceballos, Rodrigo, Alcacer

Spain are 1/2 favourites to win this encounter with bet365 bet365 . Romania are priced up at 6/1 to cause an upset, while a draw is on offer at 18/5.

Click here to see all of bet365’s offers for the game, including goalscoring markets, correct score predictions and more.

Spain will seek to take another big step towards Euro 2020 on Thursday, when they go to Bucharest to face Romania.

It is sure to be an emotional occasion for La Roja, with former boss Luis Enrique having announced last week that his daughter had lost a battle with illness – the reason he so abruptly stood down as national team coach earlier this year.

Even before the first training session overseen by new coach Robert Moreno, who was previously Enrique’s assistant then caretaker boss, there was a poignant minute’s silence held by the national team staff.

“It’s been a difficult week,” he admitted. “We’ll try to give some small joy at a very bad moment. It’s all we can do.”

Moreno, meanwhile, admitted that he would be happy to go back to the previous arrangement, in which he was No.2.

“I consider Luis a friend and this friendship comes before everything else,” he said. “If he wants to return one day, I will be delighted to step aside and work with him.”

On the field, the 2008 and 2012 European champions have not missed a beat. Since losing successive Nations League matches to England and Croatia by a 3-2 scoreline in the autumn of 2018, they have picked up five successive victories.

Their latest outing came in June, when they ran out 3-0 winners over Sweden, albeit all the goals came in the closing 30 minutes, with Sergio Ramos and Alvaro Morata both on target from the penalty spot.

If Spain are well on course to qualify, Romania are at a low ebb. Although they currently lie third, this is a flattering position considering they have played both Malta and the Faroe Islands, who will surely prove the group’s whipping boys.

Otherwise, they lost away in Sweden and were held to a 2-2 draw by Norway – hardly shocking results but not the type of form that will see them reclaim a spot at the finals after going to Euro 2016.

It will take a big turnaround for the hosts, whose last qualifying match is in Madrid in November, to claim a positive result.

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