Spain national under-21 football team

Spain Under-21
Nickname(s) La Rojita (The Little Red [One])
Association Royal Spanish Football Federation
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Albert Celades (2014–)
Most caps Gerard Deulofeu (32)
Top scorer Gerard Deulofeu (16)
FIFA code ESP
First colours
Second colours
First international
 Yugoslavia 4–1 Spain 
(Zagreb, Yugoslavia; 9 October 1976)
Biggest win
 Spain 14–0 San Marino 
(El Ejido, Spain; 8 February 2005)
Biggest defeat

 Netherlands 5–0 Spain 
(Utrecht, Netherlands; 16 February 1983)

Records for competitive matches only.
UEFA U-21 Championship
Appearances 12 (first in 1982)
Best result Winners (1986, 1998, 2011, 2013)
The 2011 winning team

The Spain national under-21 football team is the national under-21 football team of Spain and is controlled by the Royal Spanish Football Federation. The team, nicknamed La Rojita (The Little Red [One]),[1] competes in the biennial UEFA European Under-21 Championship.

Following the realignment of UEFA's youth competitions in 1976, the Spanish under-21 team was formed. Spain has a fantastic record (competition winners four times and runners-up twice); having consecutively won the 2011 and 2013 Championships. Only Italy with five titles has won the competition more often than Spain.

Since the under-21 competition rules insist that players must be 21 or under at the start of a two-year competition, technically it is an U-23 competition. For this reason, Spain's brief record in the preceding U-23 competitions is also shown, though in actuality, Spain played only three competitive U-23 matches. The first was in the "under-23 Challenge", which they lost, while the next two were in a two-team qualification "group" for the 1972 competition (facing the Soviet Union team, they lost 2–1 at home then drew 1–1 away and failed to qualify. Spain did not enter a team in the other two U-23 competitions, but have been ever present in under-21 competitions).

Spain's youth development programs has been challenging the South American dominance in the FIFA U-17 World Championship and the FIFA U-20 World Cup. In fact, 20 of the Spanish 23-man squad that won the Euro 2008 came through the ranks of the youth teams; most of them had won titles at the youth level as well.

Competitive record

UEFA European Under-21 Championship record

Year Round GP W D* L GS GA
Europe1978Qualifying Stage420258
Europe1980Qualifying Stage412142
Europe1982Quarter-Finals6501145
Europe1984Runners-up105231111
Europe1986Champions10712189
Europe1988Quarter-Finals8422104
Europe1990Quarter-Finals640254
Europe1992Qualifying Stage732265
France 1994Third Place12921219
Spain 1996Runners-up1410313414
Romania 1998Champions111010216
Slovakia 2000Third Place141130317
Switzerland 2002Qualification Playoffs10613159
Germany 2004Qualification Playoffs10622175
Portugal 2006Qualifying Stage10622378
Netherlands 2007Qualification Playoffs421184
Sweden 2009Group Stage131012277
Denmark 2011Champions151221318
Israel 2013Champions151410475
Czech Republic 2015Qualification Playoffs10721258
Poland 2017Qualified to phase final127413210
Total13/212051413430419148

*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

Individual awards

In addition to team victories, Spanish players have won individual awards at UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship.

Year Golden Player
European Union 1986 Manolo Sanchís
Romania 1998 Francesc Arnau
Denmark 2011 Juan Mata
Israel 2013 Thiago

Player records

Top appearances

Rank Player Club(s) Year(s) U-21 Caps
1Gerard DeulofeuBarcelona, Everton, Sevilla2012–32
2Iker MuniainAthletic Bilbao2011–201431
3David de GeaAtlético Madrid, Manchester United2009–201327
 Santiago DeniaAlbacete, Atlético Madrid1992–199627
5Diego CapelSevilla2007–201125
 XaviBarcelona1998–200125
7Óscar GarcíaBarcelona, Albacete1992–199624
 Javi MartínezAthletic Bilbao2007–201124
 Óliver TorresAtlético Madrid, Villarreal, Porto2013–24
10Martín MontoyaBarcelona2010–201322
 Pablo SarabiaGetafe2011–201422

Note: Club(s) represents the permanent clubs during the player's time in the Under-21s.

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Club(s) Year(s) U-21 Goals
1Gerard DeulofeuBarcelona, Everton, Sevilla2012–16
2RodrigoBenfica2011–201315
3Álvaro MorataReal Madrid, Juventus2013–201413
4Óscar GarcíaBarcelona, Albacete1992–199612
5IscoMálaga, Real Madrid2011–201410
 Munir El HaddadiBarcelona, Valencia2014–10
7Pablo CouñagoRecreativo, Celta, Ipswich Town1999–20019
 AdriánDeportivo La Coruña, Málaga2007–20119
9Julen GuerreroAthletic Bilbao1992–19948
 RaúlReal Madrid1995–19968
 Jonathan SorianoEspanyol20058

Note: Club(s) represents the permanent clubs during the player's time in the Under-21s.

Recent results

Date Competition Location Opponent Result Scorers
2 September 2015
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Tallinn, Estonia  Estonia
2 – 0
Gayà  81', Deulofeu  90+1' (pen.)
7 October 2015
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Tbilisi, Georgia  Georgia
5 – 2
Munir  2', 73', Asensio  62', Mayoral  67', Ceballos  90'
13 October 2015
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Tenerife, Spain  Sweden
1 – 1
Óliver  20'
12 November 2015
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Almería, Spain  Georgia
5 – 0
Deulofeu  17', 33', 84', Williams  56', Ceballos  65'
17 November 2015
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Rijeka, Croatia  Croatia
3 – 2
Deulofeu  19' (pen.), 54', Asensio  41'
24 March 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Burgos, Spain  Croatia
0 – 3
28 March 2016
Friendly
Murcia, Spain  Norway
1 – 0
Deulofeu  17'
1 September 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Castellón, Spain  San Marino
6 – 0
D. González  14', Munir  17', 36', Santi Mina  45', 84', Williams  88'
5 September 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Malmö, Sweden  Sweden
1 – 1
Deulofeu  50'
5 October 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Serravalle, San Marino  San Marino
3 – 0
Munir  16', Denis Suárez  68', Meré  79'
10 October 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification
Pontevedra, Spain  Estonia
5 – 0
Denis Suárez  36', Asensio  38', 90', Munir  86', 90+3'
11 November 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification play-offs
Sankt Pölten, Austria  Austria
1 – 1
Deulofeu  45+2' (pen.)
15 November 2016
2017 UEFA U-21 qualification play-offs
Albacete, Spain  Austria
0 – 0

Forthcoming fixtures

Date Competition Location Opponent Result Scorers

2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship

Group phase

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Sweden 10 7 3 0 24 7 +17 24 Final tournament 1–1 4–2 3–2 5–0 3–0
2  Spain 10 7 2 1 31 9 +22 23 Play-offs 1–1 0–3 5–0 5–0 6–0
3  Croatia 10 6 2 2 24 11 +13 20 1–1 2–3 1–0 2–1 4–0
4  Georgia 10 4 1 5 17 17 0 13 0–1 2–5 2–2 3–0 4–0
5  Estonia 10 1 1 8 3 26 23 4 0–3 0–2 0–4 0–1 0–0
6  San Marino 10 0 1 9 1 30 29 1 0–2 0–3 0–3 0–3 1–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers

Play-offs

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Austria  1—1  Spain 1—1 0—0

Players

Current squad

The following players were named in the squad for 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification play-offs against Austria, at 11 and 15 November 2016.

0#0 Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 1GK Kepa Arrizabalaga (1994-10-03) 3 October 1994 18 0 Spain Athletic Bilbao
13 1GK Pau López (1994-12-13) 13 December 1994 2 0 England Tottenham
19 1GK Rubén Blanco (1995-07-25) 25 July 1995 2 0 Spain Celta

2 2DF Jonny Castro (1994-03-03) 3 March 1994 13 0 Spain Celta Vigo
3 2DF José Luis Gayà (1995-05-25) 25 May 1995 11 1 Spain Valencia
4 2DF Jorge Meré (1997-04-17) 17 April 1997 10 1 Spain Sporting Gijón
5 2DF Jesús Vallejo (1997-01-05) 5 January 1997 7 0 Germany Eintracht Frankfurt
12 2DF Javier Manquillo (1994-05-05) 5 May 1994 7 0 England Sunderland
14 2DF Diego González (1995-01-28) 28 January 1995 1 1 Spain Sevilla
20 2DF Aarón Martín Caricol (1997-04-22) 22 April 1997 0 0 Spain Espanyol

6 3MF Mikel Merino (1996-06-22) 22 June 1996 4 0 Germany Borussia Dortmund
8 3MF Saúl Ñíguez (1994-11-21) 21 November 1994 19 2 Spain Atlético Madrid
10 3MF Óliver Torres (1994-11-10) 10 November 1994 24 3 Portugal Porto
11 3MF Denis Suárez (1994-01-06) 6 January 1994 15 2 Spain Barcelona
15 3MF Marcos Llorente (1995-01-30) 30 January 1995 3 0 Spain Alavés
16 3MF Marco Asensio (1996-01-21) 21 January 1996 12 4 Spain Real Madrid
21 3MF Mikel Oyarzabal (1997-04-21) 21 April 1997 0 0 Spain Real Sociedad

7 4FW Gerard Deulofeu (c) (1994-03-13) 13 March 1994 32 16 England Everton
9 4FW Borja Mayoral (1997-04-05) 5 April 1997 7 1 Germany Wolfsburg
17 4FW Munir El Haddadi (1995-09-01) 1 September 1995 16 10 Spain Valencia
18 4FW Iñaki Williams (1994-06-15) 15 June 1994 10 2 Spain Athletic Bilbao

Recent callups

The following players have been called up for the team in the last twelve months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Álex Remiro (1995-03-24) 24 March 1995 0 0 Spain Levante v.  Estonia, 10 October 2016

DF Héctor Bellerín (1995-03-19) 19 March 1995 9 0 England Arsenal v.  Estonia, 10 October 2016
DF Adrián Marín (1997-01-09) 9 January 1997 1 0 Spain Leganés v.  Estonia, 10 October 2016
DF Álex Grimaldo (1995-09-20) 20 September 1995 2 0 Portugal Benfica v.  San Marino, 5 October 2016
DF Rubén Duarte (1995-10-28) 28 October 1995 9 0 Spain Espanyol v.  Croatia, 24 March 2016
DF Aritz Elustondo (1994-03-28) 28 March 1994 1 0 Spain Real Sociedad v.  Croatia, 24 March 2016

MF Dani Ceballos (1996-08-07) 7 August 1996 11 2 Spain Betis v.  Estonia, 10 October 2016
MF Sergi Samper (1995-01-20) 20 January 1995 3 0 Spain Granada v.  Sweden, 5 September 2016
MF Víctor Camarasa (1994-05-28) 28 May 1994 3 0 Spain Alavés v.  Croatia, 24 March 2016
MF Pablo Fornals (1996-02-22) 22 February 1996 1 0 Spain Málaga v.  Croatia, 24 March 2016
MF Alfonso Pedraza (1996-04-09) 9 April 1996 2 0 Spain Lugo v.  Croatia, 24 March 2016

FW Samu Castillejo (1995-01-18) 18 January 1995 4 0 Spain Villarreal v.  Estonia, 10 October 2016
FW Santi Mina (1995-12-07) 7 December 1995 3 3 Spain Valencia v.  Sweden, 5 September 2016

Former squads

See also

References

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