La Roja were in no mood to be charitable, racking up a
double figure scoreline against the tiny nation from French Polynesia to wrap
up their spot in the last four.
Spain were in complete control at the Maracana,
demolishing Tahiti 10-0 on Thursday to book their place in the Confederations
Cup semi-finals.
With the world's top ranked team facing off against a
side 137 places lower, pre-match predictions heralded a double digit scoreline,
and la Roja did not disappoint, with Fernando Torres scoring four times, and
David Villa adding a hat trick of his own.
The Chelsea striker struck either side of a David Silva
effort, before Villa added Spain's fourth just before the break to give Spain a
4-0 half-time lead.
Spain's record goalscorer would add his 55th and 56th
international goals in the second half, alongside a Juan Mata piledriver and
another pair of efforts from Torres, who also missed a penalty, before Silva
added the tenth goal a minute from time.
The result sees Spain join Italy and Brazil in the last
four, while Tahiti are all but eliminated, needing a result beyond the realms
of speculation against Uruguay in their final game to erase their negative-15
goal difference.
Vicente del Bosque put out a completely different team to
the one that beat Uruguay 2-1 on Sunday, as Javi Martinez, Santi Cazorla and
Mata were all handed starts after appearing as substitutes at the Itaipava
Arena Pernambuco.
It did not take Spain long to get the ball rolling, but
Tahiti keeper Mikael Roche will no doubt be disappointed at the ease with which
he let Torres’ shot slip past his grasp at the near post.
Torres had a chance to make it 2-0 five minutes later,
but he opted, and failed, to lob the keeper, when Villa was in acres of space
waiting for the tap in.
Certainly, the vast majority of the fans inside the
Maracana were behind the minnows from French Polynesia, with every incursion
past the halfway line greeted with a deafening roar.
But such forays were few and far between, as Spain
continued to dominate proceedings despite rarely playing above a leisurely
pace.
The stadium was brought to their feet once again after a
barnstorming run from Steevy Chong Hue was halted by a cynical Raul Albiol
challenge, but Marama Vahirua could not get the free kick past the wall.
Jonathan Tehau blocked on the line from Juan Mata, and
Roche was again able to tip away from Cazorla as the second Spain goal loomed
large, and duly arrived on the half hour mark when Villa slipped in Silva
behind the fullback for an easy finish.
And moments later, Torres made it 3-0 after breaking the
offside trap, rounding Roche and prodding home.
Villa nearly added a fourth 38 minutes in when he blasted
into the side netting at the far post, but the Barca striker would make no
mistake seconds later, sliding into an empty net after Spain overloaded on a
five on one break.
With a double digit scoreline in sight, Spain did not let
up. Villa was at it again four minutes after the restart, arriving first ahead
of a queue of Spain players to bundle in Nacho Monreal’s cross.
Torres completed his hat-trick in the 57th minute when he
converted from close range thanks to a square pass from Jesus Navas, who set up
a similar chance moments later for Silva, who missed badly.
Villa would join in on the treble fun just past the hour,
taking advantage of a missed interception by Roche to finish into an empty net
to make it 7-0.
Spain’s players seemed to be almost queuing up to score,
and Mata quickly added their eighth goal after bundling his way past the
defence and drilling into the bottom corner.
But Roche, so often left stranded for the majority of
Spain’s goals, made two smart saves in quick succession to save from Villa’s
free kick, and a long-range effort by Cazorla.
With 12 minutes remaining, Ricky Aitamai conceded a
penalty after handling Navas’ cross, but Torres smacked the spot-kick off the
crossbar, to a loud cheer from the crowd.
However, Torres would silence the fans somewhat seconds
later, latching onto Raul Albiol’s pass and sprinting in behind the defence
with ease to finish.
At this point, the only question remaining was whether
Spain would reach double figures, and Silva would achieve the symbolic feat in
the 89th minute, turning and firing home from eight yards to round off a rout
for the ages.
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