<p>Spain coach Luis Enrique set each of his players the "homework" of practising 1,000 penalties ahead of the World Cup, saying he is convinced they are not a lottery.</p>.<p>The 2010 world champions face Morocco in the last 16 on Tuesday, with the threat of extra-time and penalties looming in the knockout phase of the tournament in Qatar.</p>.<p>Spain beat Switzerland on penalties at last year's Euro 2020 but were eliminated on spot-kicks by Italy in the semi-finals.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/fans-wild-world-cup-fashion-draws-praise-scorn-in-qatar-1168371.html" target="_blank">Fans' wild World Cup fashion draws praise, scorn in Qatar</a></strong></p>.<p>"Over a year ago, in one of the Spain camps, I told them they had to get here with at least 1,000 penalties taken," Enrique said on Monday.</p>.<p>"I imagine that they have done their homework. If you wait until getting here to practise penalties... (it won't be enough).</p>.<p>The Spaniard insisted spot kicks were "not a lottery".</p>.<p>"It's a moment of maximum tension, a time to show your nerve, and that you can shoot the penalty in the way you have decided, if you have trained it a thousand times," he said.</p>.<p>"It says a lot about each player. It's trainable, manageable, how you manage the tension. It's increasingly less luck -- the goalkeepers have more influence.</p>.<p>"We have a very good goalkeeper, any of the three can do very well in this situation. Every time we finish training I see a lot of players taking penalties."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/world-cup-fans-see-double-standard-in-stadium-politics-ban-1168074.html" target="_blank">World Cup fans see double standard in stadium politics ban</a></strong></p>.<p>The Spain coach also responded to criticism over the team's style of play -- their commitment to playing out from defence sometimes puts them under pressure in dangerous areas.</p>.<p>Japan earned a shock 2-1 win over Spain, with their first goal coming after the European team lost the ball on the edge of their box and Ritsu Doan slammed home.</p>.<p>"Every team has their weapons," said Enrique. "We want to get the ball in the best way possible to the forwards,"</p>.<p>"If we have to hit a long ball, we'll hit it. The interpretation has to be done on the pitch."</p>.<p>He said he did not agree with Spain's critics.</p>.<p>"It doesn't make sense to say that against Japan if we hoofed it away to clear our lines we wouldn't have let in the first goal," he said.</p>.<p>"We also wouldn't have scored any goals if we kept kicking it long. We will keep playing the ball out from the back, it's what we want."</p>.<p>Enrique confirmed that Cesar Azpilicueta had recovered from his knock against Japan and all 26 players would be fit to train on Monday evening ahead of the game.</p>
<p>Spain coach Luis Enrique set each of his players the "homework" of practising 1,000 penalties ahead of the World Cup, saying he is convinced they are not a lottery.</p>.<p>The 2010 world champions face Morocco in the last 16 on Tuesday, with the threat of extra-time and penalties looming in the knockout phase of the tournament in Qatar.</p>.<p>Spain beat Switzerland on penalties at last year's Euro 2020 but were eliminated on spot-kicks by Italy in the semi-finals.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/fans-wild-world-cup-fashion-draws-praise-scorn-in-qatar-1168371.html" target="_blank">Fans' wild World Cup fashion draws praise, scorn in Qatar</a></strong></p>.<p>"Over a year ago, in one of the Spain camps, I told them they had to get here with at least 1,000 penalties taken," Enrique said on Monday.</p>.<p>"I imagine that they have done their homework. If you wait until getting here to practise penalties... (it won't be enough).</p>.<p>The Spaniard insisted spot kicks were "not a lottery".</p>.<p>"It's a moment of maximum tension, a time to show your nerve, and that you can shoot the penalty in the way you have decided, if you have trained it a thousand times," he said.</p>.<p>"It says a lot about each player. It's trainable, manageable, how you manage the tension. It's increasingly less luck -- the goalkeepers have more influence.</p>.<p>"We have a very good goalkeeper, any of the three can do very well in this situation. Every time we finish training I see a lot of players taking penalties."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/world-cup-fans-see-double-standard-in-stadium-politics-ban-1168074.html" target="_blank">World Cup fans see double standard in stadium politics ban</a></strong></p>.<p>The Spain coach also responded to criticism over the team's style of play -- their commitment to playing out from defence sometimes puts them under pressure in dangerous areas.</p>.<p>Japan earned a shock 2-1 win over Spain, with their first goal coming after the European team lost the ball on the edge of their box and Ritsu Doan slammed home.</p>.<p>"Every team has their weapons," said Enrique. "We want to get the ball in the best way possible to the forwards,"</p>.<p>"If we have to hit a long ball, we'll hit it. The interpretation has to be done on the pitch."</p>.<p>He said he did not agree with Spain's critics.</p>.<p>"It doesn't make sense to say that against Japan if we hoofed it away to clear our lines we wouldn't have let in the first goal," he said.</p>.<p>"We also wouldn't have scored any goals if we kept kicking it long. We will keep playing the ball out from the back, it's what we want."</p>.<p>Enrique confirmed that Cesar Azpilicueta had recovered from his knock against Japan and all 26 players would be fit to train on Monday evening ahead of the game.</p>