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Casiraghi juggles options with Serbia in mind

Italy head coach Pierluigi Casiraghi may have cited Hamlet but his question was not so much "To be or not to be?" as "4-4-2 or 4-3-3?" ahead of his charges' opening Group A assignment against old rivals Serbia.

Serbia defeated Pierluigi Casiraghi's Italy in their opening game in 2007
Serbia defeated Pierluigi Casiraghi's Italy in their opening game in 2007 ©Getty Images

Italy coach Pierluigi Casiraghi may have cited Hamlet but his question was not so much "To be or not to be?" as "4-4-2 or 4-3-3?" ahead of his side's opening match against Serbia.

Dilemma
Casiraghi's squad spent a week in the Danish town of Elsinore, setting for the Shakespeare play, before arriving in Sweden and, according to the coach, they have considered a variety of options ahead of their first Group A fixture against a "dangerous" Serbia team. The dilemma for Casiraghi is whether to keep his front three of Robert Acquafresca – Italy's five-goal top scorer in qualifying – Mario Balotelli and Sebastian Giovinco or adopt a more secure 4-4-2 against opponents who defeated the Azzurrini 1-0 in their opening game at the 2007 tournament en route to reaching the final.

'Big advantage'
"It's the first game and Serbia are a very high-level team, but you also have to bear in mind that this group of players have played a certain type of football for the last three years," Casiraghi said. "The important thing about playing with three forwards is it gives you a big advantage and a lot of possibilities when you have the ball and are attacking, especially with three players like Giovinco, Balotelli and Acquafresca. On the other side we don't want to get exposed at the back."

Serbian solutions
Casiraghi, a member of the Italy side beaten in the UEFA European Under-21 Championship semi-finals by Yugoslavia in 1990, was wary of the possible threat posed by Serbia's "trequartisti" or attacking midfielders. His Serbia counterpart, Slobodan Krcmarević, will want these players to deliver given the absence of striker Filip Djordjević, scorer of five qualifying goals, who flew back to Belgrade on Sunday with a foot fracture. Krcmarević said: "We have a little problem with our attackers but we have other very good players like [Zoran] Tosić, who is playing for Manchester United [FC], [Miralem] Sulejmani from [AFC] Ajax, Rade Veljović from [CFR 1907] Cluj, so we have many solutions."

Twelfth man
Krcmarević spoke of the "many quality individuals" Italy have, yet showed no sense of inferiority. "I think it is 50-50," said the coach, who anticipated the presence of a "12th man" inside Helsingborg's Olympia tomorrow with a large turnout expected from the sizeable Serbian community in this corner of Sweden. Whatever the outcome, Krcmarević hopes this will not be the only time his 'Eaglets' face Italy in the tournament. "My hope is to play against Italy tomorrow and to meet them again in the final," said Serbia's trainer, who will likely not risk defender Ivan Obradović, still recovering from an ankle problem.

Casiraghi wish
"Maybe it is not unrealistic even if there are so many great teams and players in this tournament," he added. As for Casiraghi, his wish is to avoid a repeat of that 2007 reverse in Nijmegen – a setback that ultimately cost the Azzurrini a semi-final place. "These are two completely different teams from two years ago," he said. "The fact the first game of the last championship was against Serbia in a certain way increases the pressure and the tension, but I think that could be something positive."