Barella was one of five survivors from the team that started for Italy in the penalty-shootout win over England in the 2021 European Championship final.
The pressure was on Italy’s new-look side under Luciano Spalletti to win its opener given the other teams in Group B are three-time champion Spain and Croatia, a World Cup semifinalist in 2022. Spain had earlier beaten Croatia 3-0.
Bajrami’s goal gave the Azzurri a jolt and created some history – it was much quicker than the previous fastest in the tournament’s lifespan, which was 67 seconds by Russia’s Dmitri Kirichenko in 2004.
Yet they controlled the game after that, dominating possession to a backdrop of jeers and boos from a sea of Albanian red in the crowd.
“They showed there was a gulf in class by playing good football … we played the game the right way,” Spalletti said. “The scoreline doesn’t reflect the difference between the two teams.”
It’s now just one loss in 12 matches under Spalletti, who took over last August – three months after leaving Napoli following its Italian league triumph – and was tasked with restoring national pride after Italy failed to qualify for the World Cup for a second straight time.
Italy is clearly more at home in the European Championship these days as it goes for a record-tying third title.
Making its second appearance at a European Championship, Albania – coached by former Barcelona and Arsenal defender Sylvinho – nearly grabbed a draw in stoppage time only for Rey Manaj’s deft chip to deflect just wide off the back of Gianluigi Donnarumma, Italy’s goalkeeper and captain.
“We need to play in lots of Euros and World Cups so we can get better,” Sylvinho said. “The first 25 minutes were tough but we were up against one of the favourites to win the comp.
“We didn’t play those first 25 minutes well but we stayed in the game.”
Euro 2024 has gotten off to a fast start.
The daySwitzerland beat Hungary 3-1 in Cologne and that – after host Germany’s opening-night 5-1 thrashing of Scotland on Saturday, means there has been 16 goals so far, an average of four a game.