KAMEN, Germany -- Spain is quick, confident and eager to shed its tag as
underachiever. France, full of veterans from its 1998 World Cup title, looks to
dispel the impression it is too old to win.
So it's Spanish youth and ambition pitted against French experience Tuesday
in the second round of the World Cup.
"The French team is good physically, so age won't be a factor, but experience
might be," France defender Willy Sagnol said. "It's better to have a team
crammed full of experience rather than the other way around."
Spain earned three straight wins in the first round, while France had to
settle for second place in Group G with two draws before a 2-0 win against Togo.
"They ended up in second place for a reason. I don't think that it was by
accident," Spain striker Fernando Torres said. "We know that it is a great team,
and we have respect for them as (former) world champions, but we don't have any
fear."
Between racial insults, missed penalties and individual rivalries, there are
plenty of scores to settle on both sides.
Spain has never won a competitive match against France, a fact that irks the
Iberians as much as their failure to win a World Cup title. And the Spaniards
have not advanced past the World Cup quarterfinals since placing fourth in 1950.
Spain coach Luis Aragones dismissed suggestions his team might get
increasingly anxious the higher it climbs in the tournament.
"I don't have vertigo," he said. "I think we will end up winning. The bigger
the match, the less vertigo I feel."
Aragones said the key against France was to maintain possession, employing
skillful midfield playmakers such as Xavi Hernandez, Xabi Alonso and Cesc
Fabregas.
But France coach Raymond Domenech said Spain wasn't the only team that likes
to take command of the game.
"We know they like to keep the ball. Spain has always played that way," he
said. "But they didn't buy the ball. They don't have a divine right to it. We
can have it as well."
Many of France's 1998 veterans remain, including Lilian Thuram, Thierry Henry
and Zinedine Zidane, who is retiring after the World Cup.
The match in Hanover will provide some less-than-cheerful reunions.
Aragones and Henry are not the best of friends after Aragones' used a racist
remark in referring to the France striker while trying to motivate Jose Antonio
Reyes, an Arsenal teammate of Henry.
Henry said he had put the 2004 incident behind him.
"The whole affair has been closed for me for a long time now," he said.
For Henry, Tuesday's game will also offer a rematch against Spain's defensive
commander, Carles Puyol of Barcelona. The two last met in May when Arsenal lost
the European Champions League final to Barcelona.
"If he gets a lot of space to run, then he is very dangerous, and we have to
try to prevent that from happening," Puyol said. "We can't do man-on-man
marking, but make sure that he doesn't receive the ball easily. And above all,
not obsess with Henry, but focus on their whole attack."
If Spain wins, it would be Zidane's last match, which Spanish sports daily
Marca noted with the headline: "We are going to retire Zidane."
But French players have other ideas.
"They think they've already beaten us," France defender Eric Abidal said.
"But the hardest is yet to come for them. Spain have got technical players, but
they don't have a Zidane. Zidane is a competitor who only knows the top level.
He is a winner."
For France, Abidal and Zidane are returning from suspension, meaning Mikael
Silvestre and David Trezeguet likely will be relegated to the bench.
Coincidentally, Tuesday's match marks the 22nd anniversary of one of Spain's
most bitter soccer memories: the 1984 European Championship final it lost to
France 2-0.
France beat Spain in the same tournament in 2000, this time in the
quarterfinals after Raul Gonzalez botched a last-minute penalty kick.
Raul could get his revenge on his 29th birthday. Fabien Barthez is still
guarding France's goal, and the Real Madrid striker looks likely to return to
the starting lineup after playing with the substitutes in the group stage.
"I hope things will be different, above all, that the result is in Spain's
favor," Raul said. "I think we can do a lot of damage to them."
Associated Press Writer Jerome Pugmire in Hanover contributed to this report.