Spain coach Jorge Vilda says his “angry” gamers can shake off the psychological scars of a 4-0 mauling from Japan and be a power within the knockout levels of the Women’s World Cup.
The sixth-ranked Spanish have been left shellshocked by a Japanese aspect that topped Group C with an excellent counter-attacking show in Wellington on Monday, handing the Europeans their heaviest defeat in 11 years.
Vilda is assured his squad, laden with world-class high quality will regroup for a last-16 conflict with Switzerland in Auckland on Saturday.
“I have no doubt whatsoever that our team is going to react, that the attitude against Switzerland is going to be a different attitude,” he mentioned.
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“It’s the round of 16 at the World Cup, and no one should lose hope.
“Mentally, of course, this has done some damage. It hurts, they are angry and I’m convinced that they’ll be ready to compete. We will see in five days’ time.
“We’re not accustomed to this in my time with the team.”
Vilda ruefully admired how nicely Japan coped along with his group’s trademark possession sport, which had been efficient in comfy group wins over Zambia and Costa Rica.
Despite working with about three-quarters of possession, Spain not often threatened the objective, whereas they have been repeatedly stung by Japan on the break.
“They got to the ball before we did and they closed every possible space that we had,” Vilda mentioned.
“Every time they took the ball away from us they had a counter-attack. They started a counter-attack with very little effort.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com