England produced a come-from-behind performance to crush Spain here last night and lift the FIFA U-17 World Cup title.
"I'm very proud of them and the work we have done in the past three years. Our efforts go beyond the result of the final. We have accomplished as a team. We are the runners up, we are Euro champions. I am proud of that," Denia said at the post-match news conference at the Salt Lake Stadium.
"To be honest, I'm heartbroken because of the boys. This was final and the level was expected to be high. My job as a coach was to create a strong group and we did that. I'm very proud of that," he said.
The former Atletico Madrid central defender said they could not maintain the lead after English wingers got the better of them in the transition game.
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"It's obvious, we could not maintain the score. It's true our forwards played really well in the first 40 minutes but England's first goal really hurt us."
"England stepped up and put pressure on us. They forced us to play possession game and they are very good at transition game. We had open spaces at the back and we did have some chances. But we did not have as much control as we would have liked to," said the coach.
Rhian Brewster reduced the margin 1-2 before Morgan Gibbs White made it 2-2 and Phil Foden's strike at the hour's play helped England trail past Spain.
"It was more about left wing. Foden on the right used to cut and go inside. We know that but we didn't play well."
Admitting that England have excellent technical players, the Spanish coach said: "We had prepared a plan to curb England's wingplay by deploying the left and right back with the midfielders to help them. As you guys saw, they (England) have very good technical players who can play inside.
Asked whether the 5-2 scoreline was a true reflection of the way they played, he said: "Until 3-2 the score was about the game. We had to go forward, but such things happen when you press harder."
Denia acknowledged that England were superior to them physically and have improved leaps and bounds since losing to them via penalty in the Euro U-17 Championship in May.
On whether playing six of their seven matches at the Salt Lake Stadium helped England, Denia said: "We played in four different venues, but I have no complaints about that. We had good preparations for the final, but they made a remarkable comeback."
Spain captain Abel Ruiz expressed his disappointment.
"We played well. I have nothing more to say," he said at the mixed zone before making a exit from the stadium last night.
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