Greece are in fighting mood ahead of their crunch Euro 2012
quarterfinal on Friday against tournament favourites Germany, aiming to
conjure up the spirit that helped them win the trophy eight years ago.
Panathinaikos
midfielder Kostas Katsouranis said they were giving no thought to the
inevitable underdog image Greece have against powerhouses Germany.
"We're
going to play Germany. What do you think we are thinking? That we're
going to lose? That's why they are going to have a tough time," the
33-year-old veteran told reporters at Greece's training ground in
Legionowo near the Polish capital Warsaw.
"What do they think?
That we're just going to stand there and look at them? We're going to
play them. We have proven that through the games so far."
POAK striker Dimitris Salpingidis was similarly gung-ho.
"If you come to the dressing room, you will see 22 fighters, ready to fight. It doesn't matter to us what anyone says," he said. (See more hot pictures Click me)
"In 2004, we proved we can do it. What we're going to do is fight, and try to go through to the next round."
Greece
stormed into the quarter-finals after halting the high-octane Russians
in their tracks in their final Group A match last week.
Russia had
only needed a draw to make the last eight, but Greek captain Giorgis
Karagounis scored in stoppage time in the first half and Russia could
not breach Greece's solid defence.
"It never crossed our minds
that we were going to lose to Russia. From the first moment, we were
confident. We believed we would win. And we did," said Salpindigis.
"There's no doubt that that win was very important. It boosted the team's spirit."
Greece
started off their campaign with a 1-1 draw with Euro 2012 co-hosts
Poland, then lost 2-1 to the Czech Republic - who dashed the Poles'
hopes with a 1-0 victory in their last game - and face Portugal in
Thursday's quarter-final in Warsaw.
Salpingidis - who came on at
half-time against Poland, when Greece were down to 10 men and losing
1-0, and rapidly equalised - warned against underestimating them.
"We're
now among the eight best teams in Europe, so things will get tougher
from now on. But in my opinion, there's no surprise regarding the teams
that have advanced to the quarterfinals. Our group was very tough and
I'm glad we made it," he said.
Along with Karagounis, who is
suspended for the quarter-final after two yellow cards in two games, and
goalkeeper Kostas Chalkias, who missed the Russia game due to a
hamstring injury, Katsouranis is one of a trio who were in the squad
that won Euro 2004.
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