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Italy whip Turkey in convincing Euro start

Ciro Immobile scores to give Italy a 2-0 lead against Turkey.

Ciro Immobile scores to give Italy a 2-0 lead against Turkey. Photo: EPA

Italy have waited a long time for this European Championship to start and showed just how eager the team was to play the tournament opener.

Now Roberto Mancini’s men have begun their first major international tournament in five years with a convincing 3-0 win over Turkey.

After failing to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, Italy were already back on track with a perfect qualifying campaign of 10 wins in 10 matches.

Ciro Immobile and Lorenzo Insigne both scored after an own-goal from Turkey defender Merih Demiral gave Italy the lead – all in the second half.

Demiral redirected a cross from Domenico Berardi into his own net after attempting to intercept the pass.

Immobile then poked in a rebound of a shot from Leonardo Spinazzola on another play that began with Berardi, and Insigne later curled one in after a failed clearance by Turkey goalkeeper Ugurcan Cakir.

Italy dominated from the start but were denied in the first half by a superb save from Cakir and a decision by the referee not to award a penalty for an apparent handball.

The victory extended Italy’s unbeaten run to 28 matches and boosted the Azzurri’s status as a title contender.

The tournament began a year late because of the pandemic.

The Stadio Olimpico was still only 25 per cent full because of coronavirus measures and fans sat in small groups safely distanced from one another. Still, the crowd of about 16,000 was the largest gathering in Italy since the pandemic took hold.

Wales and Switzerland, the other teams in Group A, will play in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Saturday.

Italy appeared energised from the start and dominated possession while Turkey sat back and waited for rare counterattacks.

In the first half alone, Italy produced 13 attempts to Turkey’s none.

Midway through the first half, Cakir made an acrobatic save to deny Giorgio Chiellini.

The Italy captain was left unmarked on a corner and directed a header toward the target before Cakir leaped up, extended his right arm high into the air and pushed the ball over the bar with his fingertips.

Italy protested vehemently for two handballs in the match but Dutch referee Danny Makkelie ruled play on.

First, Immobile’s shot appeared to be knocked down by a defender’s arm. Then Turkey defender Zeki Celik stuck out his hand and stopped a cross from Spinazzola.

Celik himself appeared to feel guilty, quickly pulling his arm behind his body after making contact with the ball. There was a VAR check several moments later but the decision to play on was upheld.

In the next set of group matches, Italy stay in Rome to play Switzerland while Turkey travel to Baku to play Wales.

-AAP

Topics: football
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