Madrid: Spain want to follow up their European Championship victory by winning football gold at the London Olympics.
The world champions won a third straight major title by defeating Italy in the Euro 2012 final in Kiev, Ukraine.
That triumph is providing extra incentive for the Olympic squad.
“It would be nice to [win] after all they have achieved,” Spain forward Iker Muniain said.
“We’re starting an adventure that we’re very motivated to get started on and finish with a medal.”
If Spain manage to win the men’s Olympic final on August 11 at Wembley Stadium, they would become only the fourth team to hold both the World Cup and an Olympic title simultaneously, after Uruguay, Italy and West Germany.
“We’re young and we’ll go into the competition with the same motivation as them,” said goalkeeper David de Gea.
“They achieved something historic and there are a lot of expectations on us now, but it won’t be as easy as people think.
“There are a lot of games, so we just have to take it game by game, see how strong our rivals are and hopefully get to the final.”
Spain coach Luis Milla said the Euro 2012 victory is a great source of inspiration for his players in an Olympic squad that includes three players from the winning team — Juan Mata, Javi Martinez and Jordi Alba.
Milla called up Real Sociedad midfielder Asier Illarramendi to replace injured Barcelona player Thiago Alcantara for the games. The creative midfielder has been a regular in Barcelona’s team and helped Spain win the European Under-21 Championship last year to qualify for the Olympics.
Milla said Illarramendi is a good replacement.
“We’ve got to change our thinking now, there are other players here now,” Milla said.
Spain’s preparations include friendlies against Senegal on Friday and Mexico on July 18. The team will then travel to Glasgow to open their Olympic campaign against Japan on July 26. Honduras and Morocco are Spain’s other opponents in Group D.