Category Archives: EURO 2016

Candreva ruled out of Spain match, Bernardeschi doesn’t train as precaution

Antonio Candreva will not be available for Monday’s match against Spain. The Lazio midfielder will not recover in time from the injury he picked up against Sweden and will therefore be forced to miss another Euro 2016 game. Earlier today, the Azzurri underwent a behind-closed-doors training session at the Bernard Gasset sports centre in Montpellier. Federico Bernardeschi did not take part as a precaution, but he should be back tomorrow.

UEFA announced this morning that Monday’s encounter with La Roja will be officiated by Turkey’s Cuneyt Cakir. He will be assisted by compatriots Bahattin Duran and Tarik Ongun, his additional assistants will be Huseyin Gocek and Baris Simsek and the fourth official will be England’s Martin Atkinson. Cakir, an insurance broker from Istanbul, will referee Italy for the third time having previously taken charge of the Azzurri’s Euro 2012 win over the Republic of Ireland and a 1-1 friendly draw with Holland in February 2013. Italy’s own Nicola Rizzoli will also be refereeing a last-16 tie as he has been assigned France’s game against the Republic of Ireland tomorrow in Lyon. Rizzoli, who refereed the most recent World Cup final, will be assisted by Elenito Di Liberatore and Mauro Tonolini and his goalmouth assistants will be Daniele Orsato and Antonio Damato.

Italy’s EURO 2016 schedule

Saturday 25th June
11:00 Training session (behind closed doors)
14:30 Press conference

Info For The Media
You are kindly reminded that:
§  Access to the Casa Azzurri Media Centre and to the training pitch in Grammont will be permitted from 30 minutes prior to the start of training exclusively to UEFA EURO 2016 accredited media staff. Any changes to the schedule and other logistical information for the media will be made available at figc.it, through the FIGC’s social media channels and on the UEFA MIS platform.

 

Source:  figc.it

Allenamento a porte chiuse per gli Azzurri. Il turco Cakir dirigerà la sfida con la Spagna

A due giorni dall’ottavo di finale con la Spagna, seduta di allenamento a porte chiuse questa mattina per l

a Nazionale, che sul campo del centro sportivo ‘Bernard Gasset’ di Montpellier continua a preparare il terzo incrocio consecutivo in un Campionato Europeo con le Furie Rosse guidate da Vicente Del Bosque.

Questa mattina la UEFA ha ufficializzato che la sfida di lunedì con la Spagna sarà diretta dal turco Cuneyt Cakir. Gli assistenti saranno i connazionali Bahattin Duran e Tarik Ongun, gli arbitri addizionali Huseyin Gocek e Baris Simsek e il quarto uomo l’inglese Martin Atkinson.
Assicuratore di Istanbul, Cakir dirigerà per la terza volta l’Italia dopo il match dell’Europeo 2012 con l’Irlanda vinto dagli Azzurri 2-0 e l’amichevole con l’Olanda del febbraio 2013 (1-1 il risultato). Arbitrerà gli ottavi di finale anche il nostro Nicola Rizzoli, designato dalla UEFA per dirigere domani a Lione l’incontro tra i padroni di casa della Francia e l’Irlanda. L’arbitro dell’ultima finale mondiale avrà come assistenti Elenito Di Liberatore e Mauro Tonolini, mentre gli addizionali saranno Daniele Orsato e Antonio Damato.

Nella foto Cuneyt Cakir

ll programma della Nazionale

Sabato 25 giugno

h.11.00 Allenamento (chiuso)
h.14.30 Conferenza stampa

INFO PER LE REDAZIONI

Si ricorda che:
·         l’accesso al Media Center di Casa Azzurri e al Campo di allenamento di Grammont sarà consentito, 30 minuti prima dell’orario di inizio dell’allenamento, esclusivamente ai Media accreditati a UEFA EURO 2016.
·         eventuali cambiamenti al programma ed ulteriori informazioni logistiche per i Media saranno reperibili sul sito www.figc.it, sui canali social FIGC e sulla piattaforma UEFA MIS.

Chiellini: “Spain are our bogey team, but I expect a close match”

Spain are not a side who evoke good memories for Giorgio Chiellini who was in the team that lost to the Furia Roja on penalties in a quarter-final at the 2008 European Championship. He was also on the pitch four years at the final in Kiev when he was forced off injured after 21 minutes with Spain already a goal up and he saw his dreams of lifting the trophy fade soon after. “Spain have been something of a bogey team for us since 2008,” said Chiellini at his press conference. “That game saw them start their winning cycle. Apart from the final in Kiev, they have always been close games. There was Vienna 2008 and Fortaleza in the Confederations Cup, twice we have lost on penalties when we didn’t deserve to. I expect it to be a close match on Monday, one in which small details can make a difference. There is mutual respect, it will be a great game and it’s a shame that it’s so soon at the round of 16 stage. I haven’t seen a crisis with this Spain team, they are more alive than they were at the World Cup and they have rediscovered their desire to fight and win.”

The road to the final is uphill thanks to an unprecedentedly unbalanced draw which has placed all of most decorated countries on the same side. However, Chiellini is not looking for excuses: “There’s a lot of randomness in what has happened, we didn’t expect to win the group and then prefer that we’d have finished elsewhere. Perhaps there could have been more equality for the quarter-final draw where some groups have been penalised. It will be nice to see so many new countries playing in such important matches and it’s likely that there could be a surprise like Greece in 2004 or Denmark in 1992.”

As a key member of a defence which De Rossi called the “strongest in the world” a few days ago, Chiellini is also third in the Azzurri appearance table with 86 caps and he is the second top scorer behind striker Graziano Pellè in Conte’s side. “The best defence in the world is the one that wins,” continued Chiellini. It’s difficult, we all know it but we can’t think about an eventual victory. Our strength must be humility and the work we do day by day. This is what saw us beat Belgium and Sweden. Everyone is now saying that they expect things from us but in reality nobody did before.” With a smile on his face, he has also addressed the members of the press who had showed less impartiality in their judgments. “We were not that bad before, we didn’t become amazing after Sweden and we didn’t go back to being terrible after Ireland. Everyone who played gave their all, we made some errors and paid for them. But we can’t go after the so-called reserves, I am convinced that these players will be important and make a difference at this tournament.”

Having said that playing on a yellow is no problem (“If we have to receive a yellow card then we will, it’s a knockout game and we can’t think about bookings”), the match against Spain also provides a meeting with Morata. “Alvaro is a special guy, I’m sorry to only see him as a former teammate. I am happy for him because he deserves to play centre-forward for Spain and Real Madrid, I would be sad if he’s just been used as a bargaining chip to make money. He has incredible ability and he can still improve further, he grew a lot on a tactical and personal level during these last two years in Turin and we can say we helped him to develop every day. I hope to get the better of him on Monday, but I wish him all the best for the rest of his career.”

Physical conditioning could make a difference against one of the most technical sides in the world. “We hope that resting a lot of players in the last game could give us an advantage. It’s crucial to keep the pressing and intensity up for a team like ours. We have been working intensely since Wednesday 18th May and we hope to remain in this condition up until Sunday 10th July.” His last words were dedicated to the journalists who are used to only seeing the first 15 minutes of training. “We are working very hard and I can assure you that the real training starts after 15 minutes.”

 

Photo:  figc.it

 

Italy social media commended after group stage

Italy passed through the group stage in first place and top overall of the social media charts. Out of every team’s online communities, the Azzurri saw the largest levels of growth. On individual platforms, the Vivo Azzurro community was top on Facebook and YouTube.
According to what was reported by German digital media agency Result Sports, Italy had one of the largest digital impacts from the opening EURO 2016 fixture with an increase of 444,926 followers and likers. France are in second (+322,392), social media pioneers England third (+313,937) and Poland with their star Lewandowski fourth (+189,655).

With around 300,000 extra sign-ups to take the total up to around 4.6 million likes, Facebook saw the largest growth. Furthermore, only France were able to match the weekly engagement figure of 1.8 million on one occasion. Following on from the online success at the 2014 World Cup, such figures reiterate Italy’s leadership on Mark Zuckerberg’s social media platform. From the start of the European Championship, the Facebook page picked up 280 million views with around 370 million views of the ‘Facebook Frame’ (the ‘Forza Azzurri badge’ for profile pictures) and this figure stems from a user base of around 1.3 million. (source: Facebook Insights)

Both the @Vivo_Azzurro (ITA) and @azzurri (ENG) accounts saw an explosion in views. In June, the two accounts tallied up 42 million views and around 1.4 million profile visits (Source: Twitter Analytics). With a combined follower increase of 39,248 across the two accounts, Italy have enjoyed the fourth-largest growth on Twitter after England, Germany and France.

Italy have also grown on YouTube with an extra 24,731 subscriptions. From the start of Euro 2016, the Vivo Azzurro Channel has achieved 3.2 million views which adds up to 8.5 million minutes of content watched. (Source: YouTube Analytics)

More than 80,000 accounts have followed @azzurri since the start of Euro 2016! That means Italy have seen the fourth-most growth after Turkey, France and England (Source: Result Sports) and there are now around 520,000 Instagram followers!
http://www.figc.it/Assets/contentresources_2/ContenutoGenerico/56.$plit/C_2_ContenutoGenerico_2533074_Dettaglio_upiImageNewsTop.jpg

Source:  figc.it