A true team, strong defence, unbeatable coach: why Spain are in the World Cup final
European champions Spain face South American champions Argentina in Sunday’s final, and there are three key reasons for their strong run

Spain are reaching for a second World Cup title on Sunday against Argentina, 16 years after their first, and are doing so in a way that hardly fits the dominance of the superstars at this tournament.
While other teams rely on their biggest names, the European champions have earned their return to a World Cup final in their own unique way.
Following are three key reasons for their success:
The team is the star
No Spaniard receives as much attention from fans and the media as Lamine Yamal. The 19-year-old, who celebrated his birthday the day before the 2-0 semi-final win over France and then rewarded himself with the hoped-for trip to the final in New Jersey, is the biggest star on his team.
But he is nowhere near as dominant as Lionel Messi is for Argentina, Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham are for England, Erling Haaland is for Norway, or Kylian Mbappe, Michael Olise, and Ousmane Dembélé are for France.

“We played against one of the best national teams, but they had to face the best team. We are a team,” coach Luis de la Fuente said after Spain’s semi-final display.