The 2-1 scoreline might suggest a close contest,
 but if this had been a boxing bout the referee would have stopped the 
game after Spain’s second goal such was the gulf in class between the 
two teams.
In the first half Spain enjoyed 78% of possession, with Pedro and 
Roberto Soldado scoring goals while Cesc Fabregas also hit the post, as 
the world champions created numerous other chances.
This against a side that are the Copa America champions, boasting the
 combined striking talents of Luis Suarez and Edison Cavani.
At one point in the first half, television cameras honed in on 
Suarez, capturing the Liverpool striker breathing heavily, despite 
having barely got near the ball as he vainly chased the Spanish 
ball-passing carousel.
"It's very difficult to generate any kind of danger when you 
don't 
touch the ball," said Suarez, who scored a late consolation with a 
curling free-kick.
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"Spain is the best side in the world. They are a candidate to win the World Cup," added the Uruguayan.
The way Spain pass a team into submission is akin to a metronome 
monotonously beating out the rhythm for an aspiring piano player. Except
 for the tick tock of the metronome, substitute Spain’s Tiki-taka 
passing game.
It is a style of football that oscillates between slow passing in the
 search for a team’s weakness, to rapid quick-fire exchanges when that 
chink is discovered.
The understanding the Spanish players have of time and space seems at
 times almost extraterrestrial. It’s not, instead predicated on repeated
 practice such as El Rondo - a passing game played in a constricted space.
At Euro 2012, Spain were accused of being “boring” as Vicente Del Bosque’s side landed a third successive major title.
There was nothing boring about Sunday’s win –- unless as a spectator 
you were turned off by the lack of resistance Uruguay managed to offer. 
It was that one-sided.
And this from a Spanish side that was missing key midfielder Xabi 
Alonso through injury, with Javi Martinez and Juan Mata starting on the 
bench, while the likes of goalkeeper David de Gea and attacking 
midfielder Isco were held back for Under-21 duty in Israel.
That duo are likely face Italy in UEFA’s Under-21 Championship final 
on Tuesday, which itself provides further evidence of Spain’s current 
strength in depth. Spain’s next generation will have the opportunity to 
defend the competition they won in 2011.
If Andres Iniesta was man-of-the-match in Recife, equally impressive 
were Fabregas and left-back Jordi Alba. That trio remorselessly 
exploited Uruguay’s right flank.
Yet Spain’s tendency to not finish off opponents will give the likes 
of Argentina and Brazil, as well as European sides such as Germany and 
Italy, a glimmer of hope that the 2014 World Cup will not end with La 
Roja successfully defending the title they won in South Africa.
"We should have scored more and maybe we were tired and also as a 
result of winning 2-0, that affects the players - they start to slow 
down and that is why we suffered at the end,” admitted Del Bosque.
Soldado might have scored against Uruguay, but there is a sense that 
the hunt for a striker to finish off Spain’s intricate passing moves 
goes on.
David Villa has struggled to return to form after suffering a broken 
leg, while Fernando Torres’ own search for the form that terrorized 
defenders when he was at Liverpool continues in vain.
However, Spain's opponents will first need to get the ball off Del Bosque's bewitching team if that weakness is to be exploited.

 
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