Active Spain mentor Vicente del Bosque has no second thoughts as he gets ready to leave his post toward the end of July following eight years in control amid which they won the World Cup and Euro 2012.
He called time on his residency after Spain's way out from Euro 2016 on account of Italy in the main knockout round and will formally leave the post when his agreement lapses on July 31.
The Spanish Football Federation is required to designate his successor straight after that date, with previous Athletic Bilbao and Sevilla mentor Joaquin Caparros the most loved for the part.
Del Bosque appreciated a fantasy begin as mentor in the wake of succeeding Luis Aragones in 2008, driving Spain to the 2010 World Cup and helping them hold the European Championship two years after the fact.
Spain then endured a stun bunch stage end at the 2014 World Cup and lost 2-0 to Italy in the last 16 of Euro 2016 in the wake of completing second in their gathering behind Croatia
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Inquired as to whether he had any second thoughts, the 65-year-old previous Real Madrid player and mentor said: "No, to be straightforward I don't. I'm not saying that I'm leaving having finished each undertaking I was set, since we realized that was outlandish and unachievable.
"To have won a different universe Cup and another Euro would have been essentially outlandish. I run with a sentiment not leaving any last details," he was quoed as saying on the site of world administering body Fifa (www.fifa.com).
Del Bosque likewise denied that his rule finished on a harsh note.
"There's been a touch of everything. We've had the chance to win a considerable measure of things, however we've additionally endured massacres," he said. "That is game. In any case, I leave with a reasonable inner voice and the sentiment having satisfied my obligation to Spanish football."
All through his residency Del Bosque discussed the significance of proceeding with the group's assaulting style of play concentrated on abnormal amounts of ownership, a style inconsistent with the football played by groups guided by his presumable successor Caparros.
In any case, he said he would have no impact in transit the group played starting now and into the foreseeable future.
"That is a choice for the new mentor and I don't think I ought to have any say by any means," he included.
"I'm keeping out of it. Whoever comes in will choose and will hit the nail on the head. Every one of us sees football contrastingly and what appears to be on the whole correct to me won't not be shared by the following (man) in control.
"The following mentor must be given supreme flexibility to shape things as he sees fit."
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