Italy claimed third place in the Nations League on Sunday after beating Belgium 2-1 to bounce back from their world record unbeaten run being brought to an end.
A superb volley from Nicolo Barella just after half-time and Domenico Berardi’s 63rd-minute penalty were enough for the Azzurri to see off a Belgium team missing the injured Romelu Lukaku and Eden Hazard to win the third-place playoff.
The European champions, beaten by Spain in their semi-final on Wednesday to lose after going 37 matches without a defeat, played with verve on a gorgeous sunny day at Turin’s Allianz Stadium but Belgium’s poor luck continued following their last-gasp semi-final loss to France on Thursday.
Alexis Saelemaekers, who started in place of substitute Kevin De Bruyne, Michy Batshuayi and Yannick Carrasco all struck the woodwork before Charles De Ketelaere scored with four minutes remaining.
It was a positive day for Italy coach Roberto Mancini, who watched as Federico Chiesa starred up front for an experimental side.
“We played very well today… Chiesa can play anywhere, right or left, today he played on the left and he did really well. He’s an important player,” Mancini told RAI.
Belgium goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois may have called Sunday’s match “pointless” but the two teams put plenty of commitment into their displays, with some players looking to carve out a place in their national teams.
Giacomo Raspadori, making his sixth Italy appearance, was put through by the impressive Chiesa in the 20th minute but couldn’t get his shot away before Timothy Castagne got across to deflect his effort out for a corner.
Five minutes later AC Milan midfielder Saelemaekers struck the bar with a first-time curling shot which left Gianluigi Donnarumma, captain for the day and cheered heartily by the Turin crowd after being barracked by angry AC Milan fans on Wednesday, rooted to the spot.
Influential Chiesa
However it was Chiesa who was at the centre of Italy’s attacks and the in-form Juventus forward wasted the best chance of the match just before the break when after collecting Berardi’s pin-point long pass he took too long to shoot and allowed Courtois to charge out and make a superb save.
However Barella put Italy in front almost straight after the restart when he met a high Belgian clearance from a corner with a stunning volley that flew into the bottom corner.
SOURCES: THE GUARDIAN
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