- Italy are through to Euro 2016 quarter-finals after securing victory over Spain in last-16 on Monday night
- Juventus centre back Giorgio Chiellini reacted quickest to score opener, pouncing on Eder's free-kick rebound
- Barcelona's Gerard Pique avoided punishment for apparent stamp on Eder in second-half of tie in Paris
- Southampton striker Graziano Pelle scored Italy's second goal, latching onto fine long ball before finishing
- Azzurri are set to face Germany in last eight after their 3-0 victory over Slovakia on Sunday
Not just the
 end of a tournament for Spain but the end of an era. In all likelihood 
this meek defeat to a terrific and emerging Italian team will spell the 
end of coach Vicente del Bosque too.
This
 was a crushing defeat for Spain, the European champions of 2012 and 
2008. Del Bosque’s team were outplayed and out thought by a magnificent 
Italian side led by the incredible life force that is the incoming 
Chelsea coach Antonio Conte.
It was a two goal margin but it could have been more.
Goalkeeper
 David de Gea was Spain’s best player and they only created one good 
chance all game, Italian totem Gianluigi Buffon saving brilliantly from 
Gerard Pique in the very last minute of normal time.
Who
 would have thought we would ever say such a thing about Spain? As 
usual, they had much of the ball but this time they did nothing with it. 
| The veteran defender reacts quickest to tap in the rebound from Eder's free kick in the first-half to give Italy a 1-0 lead 
While Italy 
looked youthful and energetic and hungry, Spain looked like a team short
 of inspiration and ideas, like a team that knew there was a plane home 
waiting. They looked like a team that needs the change of direction that
 will surely now come with a change of coach. 
Del
 Bosque has done his bit, that’s for sure. Two European Championships 
and one World Cup. His team taught the world a few things in South 
Africa in 2010 and we shall never forget that. They played football in 
that tournament that most teams reserve for the five-a-side pitches in 
training. 
Here
 in France, though, Del Bosque has looked a little like the struggle to 
maintain impossible standards has finally caught up with him and it has 
been reflected in his team’s football over their last two games. Maybe, 
on refection, this was a tournament too far for the 65-year-old. 
Yesterday
 in Paris Spain were caught on the back foot by Italy’s purposeful start
 and never really recovered. De Gea kept his country in it early on but 
he is a goalkeeper not a brick wall. Eventually even he had to roll 
over. 
Italy
 were excellent, surprisingly so. Really they were. Conte’s team have 
only conceded one goal in the whole tournament but here we saw more than
 clichéd Italian stubbornness. We saw a team with imagination, dexterity
 and confidence. 
In
 the Bologna midfielder Emanuele Giaccherini Italy had the game’s best 
player. The galloping left-wing back Mattia De Sciglio was terrific, 
too, as was Southampton’s Graziano Pelle in attack. When Pelle’s goal 
arrived in added time, nobody deserved it more. 
Earlier on in the game, as the rain poured down, the signs of what was to come were there, if not the goals. 
Italy
 sprang from the blocks and De Gea was required to make two really good 
saves in the first eleven minutes. The first, from a Pelle header, was 
instantly recognisable, a plunge low to the left. Then another followed,
 this time from a Giacceherini scissor kick. 
As Spain struggled to settle and began to visibly ask each other questions, we wondered when they would find themselves. 
Cesc
 Fabregas had a chance but struck the shot poorly and then previous 
service resumed, Marco Parolo heading a De Sciglio cross wide and 
another cross from the Milan full-back being sliced over his own bar by a
 nervous Sergio Ramos.  | 
| Graziano Pelle fires the ball past David De Gea in the dying stages of 
the match to make sure of Italy's knockout victory over Spain 
Ramos and 
Pique were awful all game, just as they had been against Croatia last 
week. Theirs looks less like a partnership and more like an arranged 
marriage. It will be interesting to see what the next Spain coach makes 
of it and pretty soon the two of them were reflecting on the first 
Italian goal. 
A
 free-kick conceded by Ramos was struck fiercely by Parolo and when De 
Gea couldn’t hold it defender Giorgio Chiellini hacked the ball over the
 line. 
The lead was fully deserved and Giaccherini would have extended it had De Gea not saved his curling shot just before half-time. 
Beyond
 that, Spain did improve but they were never convincing. A beautiful 
Pelle flick released Eder in the 56th minute only for De Gea to block 
and Italy then retreated in an attempt to draw the Spaniards’ sting. 
Buffon,
 39 next season, had not been over-employed but perhaps knew what was 
coming. First, he repelled two strong shots from distance from Andres 
Iniesta and Pique before producing the kind of save of which he is still
 eminently capable as the clock ticked towards full-time. 
Italy
 conceded a needless free-kick in their own half and when a flick-on 
dropped over the blue rear guard, Pique turned it goalwards. It was not a
 sweet contact from the Barcelona player but it looked like being enough
 until Buffon dropped to his right and pawed the ball away with his 
bottom hand. 
In
 terms of importance, it was the save of the tournament so far and Italy
 made good on it by breaking quickly. Lorenzo Insigne spread the ball to
 Matteo Darmian and when the substitute’s pass was deflected up in to 
Pelle’s path he crashed the ball past De Gea to settle the argument. Italy manager Antonio Conte, who will join Chelsea after the conclusion of Euro 2016, shouts instructions to his players in Paris | 
 
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