Platini’s Euro 84
THE first meeting between two of European football’s powerhouses at a major tournament did not take place until the final of Euro 1984. Hosts France emerged victorious led by the imperious Michel Platini – whose nine goals in a single tournament remains a Euros record.
Platini opened the scoring at the Parc des Princes in a moment that dogged Spanish goalkeeper Luis Arconada for the rest of his career. Arconada let the French legend’s low free-kick slip through his grasp before Bruno Bellone chipped the Spanish goalkeeper in stoppage time to seal France’s first major tournament victory.
Djorkaeff stunner, Euro 2000
France also defeated Spain 2-1 en route to their second Euros win in Holland and Belgium.
The quarter-final clash in Bruges was a classic featuring a free-kick from another iconic French number 10.
Zinedine Zidane’s sumptuous set-piece put Les Bleus in front before Gaizka Mendieta’s penalty levelled.
Youri Djorkaeff smashed home the winner for a French side that was captained by current boss Didier Deschamps.
Zidane’s last dance 2006
France’s dominance of the fixture in major tournament matches continued on German soil at the 2006 World Cup.
Spain had appeared the team to beat in the group stage and went in front in the last-16 clash in Hannover through David Villa’s penalty. But France hit back on their road to the final.
Franck Ribery levelled with his first international goal before Patrick Vieira and Zidane – in his swansong tournament – fired France into the quarter-finals.
Spain’s three-peat 2012
Spain finally managed their first competitive win over Les Bleus in the quarter-finals of Euro 2012.
On his 100th international appearance, Xabi Alonso scored both goals in Donetsk with an early diving header and late penalty to seal France’s fate.
Spain would go on to win a third consecutive major tournament after Euro 2008 and the 2010 World Cup.
Mbappe wins Nations League
The most recent meeting between the sides saw France win the Nations League final 2-1 in Milan in controversial fashion three years ago. Two goals in barely two minutes sparked the final into life as Mikel Oyarzabal fired Spain in front before Karim Benzema’s stunning strike levelled matters.
Kylian Mbappe then scored the winner as a subtle stepover outfoxed Unai Simon.
Spain were furious the goal was allowed to stand as Mbappe had clearly been in an offside position, but the VAR official did not intervene as he deemed Eric Garcia’s attempted clearance as a deliberate play on the ball. — AFP