Home » The Briefing: Switzerland 2 Italy 0 – Holders dumped out, Vargas stars, Yakin wins tactical battle

The Briefing: Switzerland 2 Italy 0 – Holders dumped out, Vargas stars, Yakin wins tactical battle

The Briefing: Switzerland 2 Italy 0 – Holders dumped out, Vargas stars, Yakin wins tactical battle

Holders Italy limped into the round of 16 but their luck finally ran out against Switzerland. Luciano Spalletti’s team were outfought, outthought and outplayed in Berlin and can have no complaints they are heading home.

Switzerland were as stylish as their head coach Murat Yakin throughout but it took until the 38th minute for them to take the lead. Ruben Vargas’ ball into the box found the onrushing Remo Freuler, who controlled well and fired beyond Gianluigi Donnarumma.

Vargas doubled the lead with a brilliant curling shot 27 seconds after the break and they were never truly tested. The ramifications in Rome and beyond will be lengthy.

The Athletic’s James Horncastle, Mark Carey and Michael Cox analyse the talking points.


Why did Spalletti make so many changes?

Spalletti rotated his team and changed system again at the Olympiastadion. He has placed great emphasis on freshness and tactical flexibility over the past fortnight. But the team looked tentative and unsure of itself.

That will happen when players like Gianluca Mancini, Stephan El Shaarawy and Nicolo Fagioli make their first starts of the tournament in Italy’s biggest game.

There was no chemistry or patterns of play from the defending champions. They walked through a lot of the game.

The newbies didn’t bring any new energy. Fagioli, who was one of Italy’s few silver linings in the first half, missed seven months of the season after serving a ban for betting on football. He lacks match rhythm.


Spalletti’s changes failed miserably (FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images)

Bryan Cristante and Mancini are Stakhanovites in a Roma team that has gone deep in European competitions for three years in a row. But even if they were in fine fettle from a physical point of view, the timidity of yet another new starting XI inhibited it.

Their Swiss counterparts, by contrast, know each other inside out and it showed. Italy are a team in transition but they did not need to look this halting and nervous either. For a fourth straight game they fell behind. As was the case against Croatia, they conceded early in the second half too. That’s on Spalletti.

James Horncastle


Yakin’s tactics were spot on

With Spalletti ringing the changes, Italy’s lack of cohesion in and out of possession was made more stark by how organised Switzerland were throughout.

The Swiss were particularly tenacious out of possession, finding different ways to force Italy into mistakes and regain possession during their build-up.

REMO-FREULER-GOAL-


Freuler fires Switzerland in front (Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

At times they pickpocketed Italy high up the field, and in others they shepherded them into central areas towards more Swiss bodies, or they simply used the touchline as an extra defender and watched on as Italy suffocated themselves with the lack of space they curated as they looked to build through the thirds.

It was a choreographed plan from Yakin. The trio of Breel Embolo, Vargas, and Fabian Rieder were steering Italian players into danger with their team-mates behind them going man-for-man in the supporting press.

It screamed of a settled national team who understand how one another operate. Italy were sloppy in possession but a lot of that was down to the workrate of their opponents.

Mark Carey


Vargas will surely have big clubs watching?

From the opening moments of their first match at this competition, a comfortable win over Hungary, Switzerland’s greatest area of threat has been obvious — the left flank.

Down that side, they don’t simply boast good players but also clever rotations and intelligent movement. Left-sided centre-back Ricardo Rodriguez goes wide. Left-wing-back Michel Aebischer drifts inside. And, most crucially, inside-left Vargas can dart inside and outside, varying his position and keeping the opposition guessing.

Vargas was the star here, assisting the first goal for Freuler, just as he did for the winner in Switzerland’s final group game of World Cup 2022, against Serbia. He then curled home the second after some typical Swiss interplay with three players down the left.


Vargas’ goal fliers beyond Donnarumma (RONNY HARTMANN/AFP via Getty Images)

Like many of this Swiss side — Rodriguez and Xherdan Shaqiri being two other obvious examples — Vargas always seems to come alive at international level after periods of mediocrity for his club. He’s managed just eight Bundesliga goals in the last three seasons combined at midtable Augsburg. After this performance in Berlin, however, he’s certainly made his mark in Germany.

Michael Cox


Is Xhaka in the form of his career?

Granit Xhaka’s confidence must be the highest it has been in his career.

Coming off the back of an invincible domestic season with Bayer Leverkusen, the 31-year-old seamlessly carried his form into his national team and continues to be the metronome of his side.

When the game needs speeding up, Xhaka is the one to punch the ball through the lines and find a team-mate ahead of him. When the temperature needs to be cooled, it is Switzerland’s captain who will put his studs on the ball, recycle possession, and exude a calmness that ripples across the team.

No player on the field played more than Xhaka’s 98 passes against Italy, which underpins just how much influence he had on the contest.

He might not be the man to play that final pass or take that final shot, but you can be sure that Switzerland’s captain has his fingerprints on anything that his side do well going forward.

Mark Carey


Did Donnarumma deserve more?

One player who does return to Italy with his head held high is captain, Donnarumma. The Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper was player of the tournament three years ago and was Italy’s best player in Germany.

Without him, the defending champions might not have even progressed from the group. Italy’s only win of the tournament against Albania was saved by his armpit in stoppage time, which denied Rey Manaj an equaliser.

The 25-year-old ensured a 1-0 defeat to Spain didn’t turn into a humiliation, making eight saves. He palmed away a penalty from Luka Modric against Croatia and did his best to make the defending champions’ exit at the hands of Switzerland as dignified as possible in Berlin.


Donnarumma stood tall in Berlin (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

The towering ‘Gigione’ thwarted Embolo in a 1v1 and turned a wicked Fabian Rieder free-kick onto the post.

Donnarumma remains Italy’s only world class player, the rock upon whom Spalletti has yet to build anything other than a castle made of sand.

James Horncastle


Recommended reading

(Top photo: Vargas is mobbed after his stunning goal. RONNY HARTMANN/AFP via Getty Images))