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Five reasons why Spanish clubs dominate Europe

UEFA Europa Sevilla

Sevilla look to continue the reign of Spain in European competition when they face Liverpool in the Europa League final on Wednesday aiming to win the competition for a third consecutive season.

An all-Madrid Champions League final for the second time in three years between Real and Atletico Madrid on May 28 will ensure a Spanish winner of Europe’s premier club competition for a third straight year.

Indeed, until Villarreal’s defeat to Liverpool in the Europa League semis, Spanish clubs had won all 17 of their knockout ties against non-Spanish opposition this season.

Here, AFP Sports looks a five reasons for Spain’s prolonged domination of European competition.

1. Top two raise the bar

Barcelona and Real Madrid’s sustained success is the easiest to understand. They are the two richest clubs in the world with the capacity to continually invest the world’s best players.

However, that also has a drip down effect that raises the standard of the league. Other clubs have the experience of facing the best in the world at least four times a season. Travelling to face the best Italy, Germany or England has to offer isn’t nearly as intimating as a visit to the Camp Nou or Santiago Bernabeu.

Moreover, many fine players brought through the Barca and Real academies are squeezed out by the competition they face for places, but go on to make their name with other Spanish clubs.

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2. Coaching variation

The Spanish national team’s success in winning three consecutive major tournaments between 2008 and 2012 was based around the “tiki-taka” short passing style also commonly associated with Barcelona.

“Football in Spain is a very technical game. The best football is here,” said Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini, whose side was dumped out of the Champions League semi-finals by Real Madrid.

Yet, it is the tactical variety of a number of skilled coaches that has worked for Spanish teams in European competition.

Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid couldn’t be more opposed to the Barcelona-model in terms of style, but their rock-solid defensive structure has stifled Europe’s best.

Real Madrid, Sevilla and Villarreal are all deadly on the counter-attack, Athletic Bilbao – kings of the set-piece.

That variation makes Spanish sides far more unpredictable than many of the European rivals.

3. Recruitment

Whilst Barca and Madrid can count on their multi-million euro budgets, the rest still have to consistently sell their best players to Spain’s big two, or increasingly, England’s cash-rich Premier League.

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However, the structure of long-standing sporting directors who oversee the clubs’ recruitment – even as coaches come and go – has seen Atletico and Sevilla, in particular, continue to thrive.

Sevilla’s director of football Monchi has been a target for Liverpool and Barcelona in the past given his penchant to pluck outstanding talent from Europe’s lesser leagues in France, Portugal, Ukraine and even Spain’s lower divisions at knockdown prices.

Atletico were previously serial users of the now outlawed third party ownership system, but continue to thrive in bringing in talent from Portugal and South America thanks to close ties with Portuguese super agent Jorge Mendes.

4. Spanish core

A key to all the Spanish sides who have gone far in recent years has been a reliance of a core group of homegrown players.

Producing their own top class talent obviously saves the clubs money in the long run, but also fosters a unity and spirit often lacking when superstar talents from around the world are merely thrown into the same team.

“Spanish teams work very well at the academy level,” Spain coach Vicente del Bosque told AFP.

“From there, with the improvement of coaching too, it has improved the standard at club and international level.”

5. European experience

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Spain’s thirst for the Europa League with six wins and three other runs to the final in the past 10 years has meant a series of clubs now know how to handle the eccentricities of European ties and how to balance those commitments with keeping their La Liga campaigns on track.

In the last five years Atletico have played 63 European ties, followed by Real Madrid on 62, Barcelona 57, Sevilla 53, Athletic Bilbao 52 and Valencia on 48.

by Kieran Canning

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