Soccer-Spain living in a bubble but motivated by criticism, says De la Fuente


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Spain Press Conference - Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. - June 20, 2026 Spain coach Luis De La Fuente during the press conference REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

ATLANTA, June 20 (Reuters) - Spain faced ⁠scrutiny after an uninspiring scoreless draw with Cape Verde in their World Cup opener, and while manager Luis de ⁠la Fuente said his side lives in a bubble, they are spurred on by the criticism ahead ‌of their game with Saudi Arabia.

Much was expected of Spain against the tournament debutants, but De la Fuente's team were unable to find a way past the African side, and need a statement win in Sunday's Group H game with the Saudis to restore some faith.

"We live in a bubble, but ​criticism motivates us because we have very competitive footballers," De la Fuente told ⁠reporters on Saturday.

"And everything that has been said ⁠about us, and I'm not really paying attention to this, although some things I do hear here and there so ⁠you ‌never know what I know or I don't know, but this might have an impact on footballers.

"They deal with this well. It's okay that they are up to date. And I can tell you they are really, really eager ⁠to go onto the pitch and they will perform very differently tomorrow."

Spain, ​according to De la Fuente, are ‌not dwelling on the last game and the result and performance have not upset their preparations.

"There's no despair. We ⁠are motivated," he ​said.

"We're eager for tomorrow, to compete again and recover those good feelings we had before.

"It doesn't have an impact on us as professionals. We analysed the match in order to get rid of all doubts and to clarify concepts to see where we did well and our ⁠mistakes."

Saudi Arabia also drew their first match, 1-1 with Uruguay, and Spain ​know they will again need to deal with a side who will likely set up defensively.

"Because of our style, the way we compete, other teams play in a very low block," the manager said.

"We dominate, and those teams have to drop deep. Every ⁠team chooses their weapons and whatever they think suits them best, we have to be more clinical.

"The other day we weren't sharp. That's something that we've tried to improve. We lacked speed and distribution of the ball."

Once again, Spain's manager faced plenty of questions on Lamine Yamal's fitness. The 18-year-old winger came off the bench against Cape Verde in his first match since April.

"The ​question is, is Lamine Yamal ready? I can see that in your faces," De ⁠la Fuente said.

"He's feeling well, that's the best news. We will see how many minutes he should play. Some of you are ​talking about him being in the starting lineup, or for how long, the ‌main thing is that he's back."

De la Fuente turns 65 ​on Sunday, but he has a simple birthday wish.

"My best present would be to be happy, that we are injury-free, we have a good game, and hopefully we win," he said.

(Reporting by Trevor StynesEditing by Toby Davis)

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