- Spain join Italy and France in the round of 16 after dominating against Turkey
- Nolito delivers for Álvaro Morata to glance in the opener after 34 minutes
- Nolito soon doubles the lead; Morata taps in the third in the second half
- Final Group D games, 21 June: Croatia v Spain, Czech Republic v Turkey
Álvaro Morata and Nolito continued their fine form as Spain sealed qualification from UEFA EURO 2016 Group D by breezing past Turkey.
The former's second of the night was his fourth in his last three internationals, while Nolito's strike that doubled the Spanish advantage after 37 minutes made it five in his past five outings for the holders.
Fatih Terim said in Thursday's press conference that a team cannot take on La Roja "without trying to actually play" themselves. Spain, however, afforded them little chance to do so.
The breakthrough arrived following a foray by Jordi Alba. The left-back checked back and fed Nolito, whose cross was glanced in by Juventus ace Morata. Provider swiftly turned scorer, the Celta Vigo forward punishing Mehmet Topal's miscued header with a scuffed, first-time finish.
Further damage was forthcoming three minutes into the second period. Andrés Iniesta found Alba with a delicious threaded pass in behind and he laid on the simplest of finishes for Morata.
Man of the match: Andrés IniestaAnother majestic midfield contribution from Spain's No6 which consisted, among other highlights, of 93 completed passes, 40 of which were in the final third, and the invention of three decent chances.
Burak against the wall
Drafted in to beef up a Turkey attack that has mustered only seven goals in 2016, Burak Yılmaz cut an isolated figure. The Beijing Guoan striker, cautioned early on, had a thankless task up against Sergio Ramos and Gerard Piqué. Turkey's 4-3-3 was, in effect, a 4-5-1, meaning he was their only 'out ball'.
Drafted in to beef up a Turkey attack that has mustered only seven goals in 2016, Burak Yılmaz cut an isolated figure. The Beijing Guoan striker, cautioned early on, had a thankless task up against Sergio Ramos and Gerard Piqué. Turkey's 4-3-3 was, in effect, a 4-5-1, meaning he was their only 'out ball'.
History to repeat itself?
Whatever happened this evening, Turkey's fate was always going to be decided on matchday three against Czech Republic. If, after reading that, you think you are experiencing a sense of déjà vu then you are not mistaken – in 2008 in Geneva, Nihat Kahveci struck twice late on against the Czechs for a side coached then, as now, by Terim.
Whatever happened this evening, Turkey's fate was always going to be decided on matchday three against Czech Republic. If, after reading that, you think you are experiencing a sense of déjà vu then you are not mistaken – in 2008 in Geneva, Nihat Kahveci struck twice late on against the Czechs for a side coached then, as now, by Terim.
That unlikely 3-2 victory in the teams' last group game took Turkey through at their opponents' expense. A EURO classic. Will we witness another in Lens on Tuesday?