Friday, March 2, 2012

Goal Crisis


Last week in la Primera Liga only two keepers, Claudio Bravo and Iker Casillas, had the pleasure of enjoying a full 90 minutes of football without having to perform the pitiful task of picking the ball out of the back of their net. Plenty of goals to keep the neutrals happy, but for the 18 managers not in charge of either Real Madrid or Sociedad these defensive lapses would have required some midweek chalk and duster action, as drawing boards at their respective training grounds were wheeled out.

Spain is not only in the red where money is concerned, but also where goals are. A look at the league table shows that only five teams don’t have a minus sign in front of their goal difference figure: Real Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Club Athletic and Atlético Madrid. Not even fourth placed Levante has counterbalanced it’s shortcomings in defence with more goals at the other end.

A night José Mendilibar's side would like to forget
Out of the top five European leagues, Spain has the least amount of teams with a positive goal differential this season. In both the Premier League and Serie A, eight teams have scored more times than they have conceded, in France, half of the sides (ten) in Ligue 1 have offset their ‘goals against’ figure with an equal or greater ‘goals for’ figure, while in the more diminutive Bundesliga, seven of the 18 teams can boast the same. Most startling of all is the comparison with the league’s less glamorous underling, la Segunda división, where 11 teams are solvent when it comes to goals in their favour.

So what’s behind all this defensive leakiness in the Spanish top flight? The short and predictable answer is the colossal gulf between the top two and the rest. This is definitely true for Osasuna, who are generally regarded as one of the more resilient sides in the league, but whose ten goal deficit somewhat contradicts that notion. Although recently putting a halt to Barca’s title hopes with a 3-2 win in a rancorous encounter in the Reyno de Navarro, Mendilibar’s side was on the receiving end of an 8-0 pummelling earlier on in the season at the hands of Pep’s men, before having to place it’s tail between it’s legs for a second time a couple of months later, on the back of a 7-1 humbling in the Bernabeu. As of writing, fans of the Pamplona club have an off-putting “-10” spoiling their view of the table when they scan the GD column.

Perhaps the Basques are a victim of their own playing style: pressing high up the pitch and leaving plenty of space for opponents to hit them on the break with. If this is true of Osasuna, it’s definitely the case for Rayo Vallecano (-4). The left leaning Madrid club’s frenetic approach, whereby the forward players are constantly pressing, thus leaving the likes of Movilla and Javi Fuego to put out any potential fires in midfield (excuse the pun), has so far proved an effective strategy for the newly promoted side, not to mention a great one to watch. However, this high-risk tactic has also exposed the Franjirrojo backline on more than one occasion, as their poor home record attests to. And yes, Barca and Real Madrid have also handed them their biggest spankings of the season so far (6-2 and 4-0 respectively).

Barkero beating Joel in one of the only non-Madrid/Barca goal fests this season: Levante 3-5 Rayo 
But, we should lay off the poor old blancos and culés, it’s not all their fault. Sure, they dish out drubbings on a regular basis, but clubs only have to face them four times a year. That leaves 34 other encounters to turn things around with. However, this season a clear lack of firepower has made redeeming embarrassing score lines by emphatically beating lesser teams less commonplace. Marcelino’s disastrous attempted revamp in Sevilla, where Trochowski was brought in to link up play between the back line and the forwards, never really got going. Defensively things were shorn up slightly but the former Sporting Gijon manager’s tinkering resulted in an uncharacteristically tame goals haul for the Sevillistas, which wasn’t helped in anyway by Negredo having to spend the majority of the season out nursing an injury.

Two other sides you’d expect to find among the leaders of the ‘goals for’ table are Villarreal (-11) and Malaga (-3), however neither of them has set the world alight this season, to put it mildly. The less said about the former’s catastrophic season the better. At this stage last year the Castellón outfit had a plus 22 goal difference but with a squad depleted to a shadow of it’s former self this time round, due to injuries and uninspired signings, the Yellow Submarine has failed to make any waves, or even notable ripples, in the league. Malaga, for it’s part, has spent big and received very little in return. It’s fair to say Van Nistlerooy has been an almighty flop, while the man getting in ahead of him, Rondon, is hardly going to be a contender for the Pichichi any time soon. Although, Pelligrini’s side mauled Zaragoza last week 5-1, that was Zaragoza and the final result was somewhat flattering.

Last season finished with seven teams scoring more than they conceded. How the rest of this campaign plays out is anyone’s guess but with Barca and Madrid continuing to steam roll teams and high score lines coming few and far between elsewhere, the goal shortage in Spain doesn’t look like it’ll be on the mend any time soon.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

No room for the Kid, but space for a kid


It was a long time coming but this week Fernando Torres finally got the heave-ho from the Spanish team, after his unprecedented dip in form over the past two years.

That was the main talking point when Vicente del Bosque announced his 23-man squad ahead of Wednesday’s friendly against Venezuela. The quietly spoken coach expressed his heartache at having to drop el Niño, but justified his decision by stating that he didn’t want other players to go unrewarded for the sake of someone else’s past glories, “It pains me to leave Fernando out, but I can’t be unfair to other players who are knocking on the door”. Other notable absentees included Albiol, Iniesta (dogged with a niggling hamstring injury), and Pedro, who has only featured as a bit part player this season.

Torres’ absence, you’d assume, is in large part due to the abundance of forward talent vying for a spot on the much coveted ‘Furia Roja’ plane to the Ukraine and Poland this summer. However, for the mean time at least, Del Bosque faces a bit of a dilemma in that position. With Villa still recovering from his nasty shin fracture in Yokohama, Negredo picking up an injury against Valencia on the weekend and Soldado not exactly firing on all cylinders of late, the only in form out-and-out striker available to play in Malaga this Wednesday is another Fernando. Fernando Llorente. The Athletic target man seems to have taken off where Soldado left off, and is hitting the kind of form that would make it hard for any coach to ignore him.

Torres looking for the shadow of his former self after nightmare miss against Manchester United
The forward conundrum is not the only problem presenting itself to the mister. Fatigue is another legitimate concern for the current European and World champions. Being the best comes at a price, and in Spain’s case that manifests itself in a very busy playing schedule, not only at international level but also at club one. Barcelona players, seven of whom make up the current squad, have the most demanding itinerary of all: Xavi Hernández for example has already played 2,868 minutes in 38 games in three different continents this season for club and country. But that pales in comparison to the 3, 368 minutes Real Madrid’s Xabi Alonso has clocked up in 40 matches since August.

The effects of fixture congestion are not only apparent in Barcelona’s weary away form in the current league campaign. The national team’s reputation has also taken a blow, as the abysmal friendly record since last August attests to (W1, D2, L4). Many put this down to not only exhaustion, but also to a verging on mutinous spirit within the national camp, with certain players unimpressed with the Spanish FA’s insistence that ‘la seleccion’ takes on the role of the footballing equivalent of the Harlem Globetrotters-exhibition matches for the highest bidders.

Del Bosque’s remedy to all this has been to ease off on the over reliance on the two big clubs, with only 11 members in this most recent squad hailing from Real Madrid and Barcelona. The new club to make it’s presence felt in the dressing room is undoubtedly Club Athletic de Bilbao.

Muniain grabbing the winning goal against CSKA Moscow last week
Marcelo Bielsa’s team has garnered plenty of positive attention this season. The transition from the traditional long ball, tough tackling tactics of before to the more technical, pass focused approach favoured by the ever scowling Argentine is still a work-in-progress, but by no means have the lion’s famed intensity levels dropped as a result of the revamp. Four players from the Basque club have got the nod from the national coach: Llorente, the most senior of the lot, getting his 19th call up, defensive partners, Iroala and Javi Martínez, each make their seventh appearances on the team sheet while the prodigious Iker Muniain makes his debut for the first team.

Muniain’s star has been shining bright for quite some time now, but with the glut of talent at Del Bosque’s disposal no one would have thought the teenager would be included in the squad quite so soon. However, since making his first team debut for the Athletic at 16 years of age in 2009, he has really cemented his place in the San Mamés side and this season has played 2,863 minutes in 36 games and is acting as the driving force behind Bielsa’s “more football” approach.

A strong dribbler, the has been likened to Iniesta and Messi on more than one occasion, the teenager has also made a habit of getting his name on the score sheet recently, which no doubt the moustachioed manager will have taken note of.

So does this shift in power spell the end for the big clubs dominance in la selección? It’s too soon to say, but with the financial pull of the Premier league already luring players like Silva and Mata away from Spanish shores and the emergence of teams like Athletic, it’s not that ludicrous of a theory.

Although not a member of either Real Madrid or Barca, the once prolific Niño Torres is the first big name to be culled from the team. And with whippersnappers like Muniain lurking in the figurative and literal wings, none of the big names are safe from the chop.


Keepers: Víctor Valdés (Barcelona), Reina (Liverpool), Casillas (Real Madrid); Defenders: Iraola and Javi Martínez (Athletic Bilbao), Piqué and Puyol (Barcelona), Arbeloa and Sergio Ramos (Real Madrid), Jordi Alba (Valencia); Midfielders: Busquets, Fàbregas, Thiago and Xavi (Barcelona), Cazorla (Málaga), David Silva (Manchester City), Xabi Alonso (Real Madrid), Jesús Navas (Sevilla); Forwards: Llorente and Muniain (Athletic Bilbao), Mata (Chelsea), Negredo (Sevilla), Soldado (Valencia).

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Cut-Throat Board Rooms: Managerial Changes in la liga this season

On a fickleness scale the average Spanish football club president probably sits somewhere between an insecure teenage girl discovering an even squeakier-clean version of the boy band she’s already pledged her existence to and a cat, basing the amount of affection it shows it’s owner on how hungry it is. To remind ourselves of the kneejerk mentality within the executive circles of Spanish football, let’s look at some of the decisions this privileged group of people have made in the recent past: there was Florentino Pérez’s assertion in 2003 that Vicente del Bosque, who helped Real Madrid lift the league and Champions League twice, “was not the right coach for the (club’s) future”, and near neighbour Enrique Cerezo’s contract breaking antics, which have seen 13 changes of management since he took over at Atlético Madrid in May 2003.

This season in La Primera, whether because of the increased financial pressure or the particularly “meh” performances on offer by many of the teams, the men in suits have been especially sack-happy even by their high standards, with eight of the 20 clubs changing coaching staff already.

So just how spot on or way off have these respective technical area revamps been?

To begin this story in chronological order, we must venture all the way back to October. It’s easy to forget all the hullabaloo that surrounded Real Mallorca back then, when Michael Laudrup made his way for the exit doors days after his number two, Erik Larsen, was sacked for publicly slagging off the club’s sporting director, Llorenç Serra Ferrer. Defenders of the great Dane, who had argued that the hierarchy had effectively pushed him out, piped down once the dust settled over the Balearic club and his replacement was revealed, the much acclaimed Joaquín Caparrós. Considering the austere measures the club has adopted (the last minute sale of talisman Jonathan De Guzman to Villarreal a case in point), the ex-Athletic coach has done an impressive job so far as, although still skittish, the team is by no means the worst in the top flight, with their last six league results reading LWLWLW. Caparrós, used to operating on a limited pool of resources (e.g. Athletic’s Basque only policy), is probably a better fit for the cash strapped club than the former Barca and Real Madrid legend.

The next coach on the scrapheap was Hector Cúper, which was admittedly his decision. The well travelled Argentine made his way out of Racing Santander for two reasons: firstly he didn’t know who was running the club, and secondly his murky past, which involved an Italian mafia betting syndicate, had caught up with him. Unable to lure in one replacement, the makeshift board of directors entrusted the club on three heads who were willing to work for a fraction of what a mercenary would have asked for: technical director Jaunjo González accompanied by Fede Castaños and Pablo Pinillos. Despite sitting on top of the drop zone, the three new charges have done a remarkable job considering how demoralising the last year has been for the Cantabria club, grinding out some pretty impressive results against difficult opposition along the way, like the three points they took from Osasuna’s notorious fortress, El Reyno de Navarra, and the points they squeezed in the last month against Valencia and Atleti. As of writing, they sit three points below safety, sadly however, even if they were to escape relegation this year, the rap is up for racinguistas, and the inevitable slide is only a matter of time.
With the winter break looming December was an opportune time for guillotine sharpening and three heads had rolled by the time the new year had arrived. First up was Gregorio Manzano, whose role at the Atlético was already reduced to a dead man walking capacity long before getting the boot. Then it was Juan Carlos Garrido’s turn to finally put an end to his disastrous campaign at Villarreal, before Agapito Iglesias decided that Javier Aguirre was a suitable scapegoat for Real Zaragoza’s pathetic showing.

The fine people governing matters at the Calderón made no secret of their intentions to coax club legend Diego Simeone back to instil some of his much needed blood and guts mentality into the decent squad of players available, which had been lacking any sort of cohesion under Manzano. And it seems to have worked. The colchoneros have gone from being the division’s laughing stock, with the worst away record of any club, to one of it’s most resolute teams, conceding just two goals in eight matches under El Cholo’s instructions. So dramatic has the turn around been for the South Madrid outfit that they now have a very realistic chance of finishing in fourth and grabbing the last Champions League spot, which was unimaginable two months ago.

What was more unpredictable than Fernando Roig’s sacking of Garrido, was the Yellow Submarine president’s choice of replacement. The usually level-headed owner has always preferred to promote from within, which is a commendable trait in this day and age, but not when the man coming in has already been having a torrid time with the second team. José Molina has not exactly invigorated Villarreal’s flagging squad and his only victory to date was against a must-beat Sporting Gijón. Damage limitation is the order of the day for the new manager but if he is not careful a relegation dogfight could be on the cards. However, in fairness to the ex-goal keeper, he was had a difficult run of fixtures to start off with and should be able to stir the club away from a calamitous drop.

Zaragoza, having failed to secure ex-Getafe boss Míchel, settled for Manolo Jiménez to do God knows what for the Aragon outfit. One win, two draws and three loses since taking over is not the kind of form required if the club is to climb from the foot of the table. Notwithstanding, the problems at the club are far too deep routed for Jiménez to fix, and the estimated €110 debt is probably a bigger concern than him keeping them in la liga is.

2012 has been just as harsh on poor old coaches, with three more forced to pack up their desks. Sevilla, Granada and Sporting Gijón all gave their managers the heave-ho. At the time Fabri being axed to make way for Abel Resino seemed harsh considering the Galician had guided the team to two promotions in two years, however, the ex-Atleti boss (there are a few of them) has got off to a positive start since joining, boasting nine points from 12 and widening the gap between los empresarios (the entrepreneurs) and the relegation zone.

Spanish football let out a cry when it got word of Manuel Preciado’s sacking, as did the man handing him his P-60, Manuel Vega-Arango. The president explained his decision to let go of the longest serving coach in the league between tears, justifying it with the simple mantra “this is football”. In stepped Javier Clemente, who from the get go declared that pretty stuff had no place in his plans, only results did. Two draws and a lose may look like a poor return, but taken in context it’s not so bad: Osasuna, Valencia and Atleti. Despite rubbing Nacho Novo up the wrong way upon arrival, the straight talking manager seems to have his squad singing off the same hymn sheet now.

The most recent change came in Sevilla, where Marcelino’s shoring up of the defence at the cost of scoring goals saw Míchel take his place at the helm. The former Getafe man didn’t get the immediate reaction from his players as you’d expect, but on it’s third attempt the Andalusian club finally got a win under him. Sitting in eleventh place the team is only four points off fourth place so Míchel, who has drawn blood from stones before with Getafe, will most certainly be aiming to be listening to the famous Champions League anthem on the right side of the tv screen next year.

None of the Basque sides, neither of the Catalan sides and only one third of the Madrid sides have had a turn over of technical staff this campaign. That just leaves Betis, Levante, Valencia and Malaga as the only other clubs to remain loyal to their managers so far this season. In the case of the latter however, things probably won’t stay that way for long, as Pelligrini’s nouveau riche Boquerones show no signs of clicking any time soon.


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Second Leg with a Foot in the Door: Atlético Madrid vs Lazio


This Thursday in the Spanish capital Atlético Madrid and Lazio conclude the second leg of their Europa League fixture on banks of the city’s Manzanares river. Last week the Italians were humbled on their home turf, and as far as order measurements go, theirs is going to be quite a tall one if they are to progress any further in the competition. The Roman side has a 3-1 deficit to overcome against a rojiblanco team which, so far under Simeone’s stewardship, has only leaked two goals in eight competitive matches.

Domestically speaking, neither team had a encouraging weekend on the back of last week’s encounter, with both being frustrated by “lesser” opposition. In Lazio’s case, the wounds they were left to lick were particularly deep, as eighth placed Palermo gave them a 5-1 pummelling, which saw them drop down to fourth in Serie A and led an embarrassed Edy Reja to admit, "we had a total blackout" after the final whistle.

Lullabies and good night kisses are what one would expect the former Napoli coach to lavish upon Sunday’s experimental 3-4-1-2 formation before putting it to bed ahead of Thursday’s trip to the Calderon, but his hand may be forced again as injury woes still abound for the Biancocelestis (White and sky blues). So depleted is the Lazio squad at the moment that Christian Ledesma was played as a centre half during the humiliation in the Stadio Renzo Barbera on the weekend. With the likes of Stefan Radu and Giuseppe Biava still out, and players like Abdoulay Konko (suspensed for the Palermo game) probably low on confidence after being humbled against the Spanish side last week, Reja has very few resources at hand to pacify the Atleti front line.

Luckily for him though, aside from their master class in Rome last week, the rojiblanco machine has not exactly been firing on all cylinders of late. On Sunday Cholo’s men were held to their third league stale mate in a row, as a plucky, second-from-bottom Sporting Gijon held them to a 1-1 draw in the Molinon. This uninspiring string of results raises some legitimate concerns about the wastefulness on display, especially considering the talent at the Madrid’s club disposal - they had to rely on Canella to score an o.g. for their only goal in Cantabria.

Dropped points not withstanding, the worst thing to come out of Sunday’s la liga clash was the news of Diego’s hamstring injury, which will see the Brazilian side lined for at least a month. Without his creative flair and vision in the centre of the park Atleti are definitely a weaker team and his absence on Thursday arguably leaves Simeone without his best player since taking over. On a positive note for the Argentine, Tiago should be available to fill in for the Werder Bremen loanee, and with Mario taking on the role of the holding midfielder, the Portuguese player could be pushed higher up the pitch (a position he is already comfortable with) to help pull the strings for the likes of Koke, Adrian and Falcao.

Whatever the concerns about firepower are for the home side, the fact of the matter is that this game is theirs to lose and as long as they can contain Klose and Alfaro up front, Lazio don’t stand much of a chance of beating them. Defensively, Atleti look very assured and breaking them down will be a real test for the off-form visitors.

The Italians are in a catch 22 situation, where committing men forward in order to overhaul their deficit is necessary but at the risk of exposing a make-shift defence to the likes of Adrian and Falcao who thrive on counterattacking football.

Prediction: Like the first leg I see Atlético upping their game for the European stage, especially at home, where they have convincingly won all of their Europa League matches so far this campaign.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Lazio vs Atlético Madrid: Familiar Faces and Old Friends

Having recently received a hero’s welcome on his return home to the Vicente Calderón to help get his beloved  Atlético Madrid’s season back on track, Diego Simeone is now preparing himself for a trip back to yet another cherished old hunting ground from his playing days, the Stadio Olimpico. This Thursday ‘El Cholo’, through pure chance, will lead his Rojiblancos out into the Roman caldron to take on his other beloved club, Lazio, in his first European test as a manager in the Europa League.

Much like he is associated with Atleti’s brief run of success in the nineties, the Argentine is also fondly remembered by the blue half of the Italian capital for lifting titles. During his four spell here, between 1999 and 2003, he added a Serie A title, the Italian Cup and the Super Cup to his list of accolades.

Simeone is not the only one psyching himself up for a blast from the past on Thursday night though. Miroslav Klose and Diego will also have to deal with familiar faces from their past, as they face off against each other for the first time since their wonderful spell together at Werder Bremen ended, a club where they formed an almost telepathic partnership that produced 72% of the team’s goals (55) in 2007 and helped the German side to a Champions League spot. Klose, an out-and-out striker, who incorporates intelligent movement, good decision-making and great finishing, was the perfect match for the Brazilian’s sharp passing and jaw-dropping vision. Since moving on from the Bundesliga, they have both developed other partnerships: the German has found another Brazilian provider in the form of Hernanes, while Diego has the likes of Falcao and Adrian to look for up front.

Back in October, the Madrid outfit was beaten in Italy 2-0 by Udinese in the same competition, but that was under Manzano, and the match was played in the wrong Italian city. History favours los colchoneros when it comes to playing in Rome, where they have never lost. Back in 1998 they were held to a goalless draw against Lazio in the semifinals of the UEFA Cup, which saw them knocked out on aggregate, and in 1999 they came back from the Mussolini-constructed arena with a 2-1 win, however, that was against Lazio’s bitter rivals and stadium co-lodgers, Roma.

Lazio have enjoyed a decent season so far, currently sitting third in Serie A, but coach Edy Reja has a bit of a selection dilemma ahead of this European clash due to the troublingly long list of injuries he has to contend with.

In defense, veteran centre-half André Dias is out, and it looks as though the always reliable Stefan Radu will be missing at left full, as well as the versatile Senad Lulic, who have both had to sit out training this week. In their absence Reja has been experimenting with Abdoulay Konko at left back this week. If the Frenchman were to start against the likes of Adrian, Falcao and Arda Turan on Thursday, he could be in for a rough night as he’s not proven. There is talk of new signee, Antonio Candreva, filling in for Lulic on the left of midfield.

As far as selection problems for Simeone go, the main concern is Tiago who is still carrying a knock after playing against Racing Santander on Saturday. The Portuguese player will be missed in the middle of the park, where he would more than likely act as the thorn in Hernanes’ side, keeping the Brazilian’s breathing time on the ball to a minimum. To that end, it might be a good opportunity for Paulo Assunção – who, so far under Simeone, has been a rare sight on match days - to impress his new boss on the European stage. Apart from that, Atleti look at full strength and should be looking to get something from this game to take into the return leg the following week.

Simeone’s arrival has shored things up defensively for the south Madrid club, Thibaut Courtois has not had to pick a single ball out of the back of his net since the former midfield general took over from Manzano. As well as that, away form has picked up dramatically compared to before Christmas, when they were the most road sick team in the league. In recent weeks though, the team has been running on hot air and scoring has become an issue that needs to be resolved. The return of European football and the big occasion is as good a catalyst as any to invigorate this group of very decent players again and the depleted state of their hosts is not doubt something the players are well aware of.

Prediction: a 2-0 win for the visitors as Lazio’s injury list proves too much of a burden for them to deal with.


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Villarreal: the start of the end?


As far as la liga presidents go, Fernando Roig is quite a likeable character, one who seems to float above the sea of corruption, irresponsibility and downright incompetency many of his counterparts shamelessly choose to tread water in.

Since taking over at small town club Villarreal in 1997 his stewardship has been a massive success. A season or two of yo-yoing between la segunda and la primera at the beginning of his reign has long been forgotten and now the tiny outfit from Castellón can not only boast about being able to call Spain’s most prestigious competition, la primera liga, it’s home, but more precisely the higher echelons of the competition, where it has managed to finish in the top half of the table for the last eight seasons. As a result playing in Europe is no longer a fairy tale like novelty for the fans, rather a pre-season requirement: gracing the Champions League three times, getting as far as the Europa League semi-final twice (one of those times last season) and lifting the now sorely missed Intertoto Cup has seen to that.

A glance at some of the playing staff to have adorn the yellow jersey in recent years sheds some light on the club’s success: Marco Senna, Santi Cazorla, Diego Forlan, Pepe Reina, Juan Roman Riquelme, Borja Valero, Guiseppe Rossi, Javi Venta and Robert Pires to name but a few.

Roig’s impact at the club doesn’t just end with the first team either, he has also had the foresight to invest wisely in the ‘cantera’ (youth team). The imaginatively titled Villarreal B has been gracing la segunda division for the past three seasons, making Villarreal, along with Barcelona, one of only two clubs to have representation in Spain’s top two leagues.

An unrelated picture of a submarine which has seen better days.
An impressive story for such a modestly sized outfit but such formidable achievements come at a price, and in this case it comes in the form of raised levels of expectation. Similar to the legend of Ikarus flying too close to the sun and crash-landing to earth, the Yellow Submarine is feeling the heat this season, after reaching some pretty lofty heights over the past decade.

The current campaign has been marred by an almost supernatural string of calamities and misfortunes for Roig’s beloved club. Admittedly the team was already starting the season on the back foot after the reluctant departure to Málaga of buck-toothed cantera whizz, Santi Cazorla. Losing such a creative and cherished member of the dressing room-Senna compared his exit to losing a finger- was an ominous sign of the suffering to come. In fairness to Roig, his hand was twisted on the matter of el Cuín leaving-it was either the Spaniard or his team mate of note, Guiseppe Rossi, who made way as the lucrative offers from across Europe came in for the pair. Perhaps on reflection the wrong man went, seeing as how Rossi has been nursing cruciate ligament damage for the majority of the season, but more crucially the wrong men came in to replace him. Hindsight is easy thing to dish out but it goes without saying that Jonathan de Guzman and Cristián Zapata have fallen well short of the mark so far.

The players’ strike was the next thing to put a dent in the team’s confidence as a trip to the Camp Nou, where a 5-0 drubbing was mercilessly handed to them, was to be their season opener instead of what surely would have been a more comfortable game at home to Sporting Gijon to ease them into the campaign.

Imperfect start: Messi celebrates Barca's fifth goal in the opening match of the season.
Things went from bad to worse and the meagre opening tally of seven points from a possible 27 was overshadowed when the disaster of what was to be one of the worst Champions League performances got under way with a 2-0 loss to Bayern Munich. Despite being pitted against the German giants, nouveau riche Man City and Serie A revelation Napoli, zero points in six games and a pitiful two goals scored was an awful return, one which led to Juan Carlos Garrido’s team being the laughing stock of the group stages (Manchester clubs aside).

A decent, or at least honourable, run in the Copa del Rey was also beyond the club’s reach as it embarrassingly fell to Segunda B side Mirandes at the first jurdle.

It must be said that none of this was helped by injuries. The loss of Rossi was a massive blow but the house of cards-like squad depletion that followed was plain tragic and completely unforeseeable, with Cani, Marco Ruben, Nilmar, Senna, Camuñas and Zapata joining the Italian on the physio’s bench. At one stage Garrido only had 13 first teamers to choose from, including sub keeper Cesar.

Sitting in the relegation zone during the Christmas period forced Roig into drastic action yet again, this time having to axe Garrido as first team coach. The amicable nature in which he left the club reflected the inevitability of the decision, however, his replacement raised more eyebrows than it did fans’ hopes. Former Villarreal, Atlético Madrid and Spanish international (left wing and keeper) José Molina was put in charge of the embattled submarine despite coming straight from the second team which itself was struggling to keep it’s head above the relegation zone of la liga Adelante.


Roig has always had a policy of rewarding loyalty and hiring from within (Garrido being a prime example), which would go to explain Molina’s appointment. Financial constraints, something that has affected this man of industry greatly during the current economic crisis, may also have played a part in this internal promotion.
"Fix this mess": Roig and new coach Molina
Whatever the case he is the manager now and with three games down, the draw, lose and win he has under his belt have made drawing any conclusions quite difficult so far. A valiant point against local rivals Valencia was followed by a limb performance and loss against a revitalised Atleti, which in turn was followed by a ruthless 3-0 win over Sporting that finally took the team out of the relegation zone, albeit on goal difference. All very Jekyll and Hyde really.

So with no cups to play in and no hope of gaining a European position for next year, the season is all about damage limitation now and trying to crawl back to a somewhat respectable position. Something the club should be able to do considering the talent it has at it’s disposal.

The real concern is what will come after that. With pocket strings so tight as to cause friction burns and a talented squad not exactly showing a fighting spirit or willingness to die for the cause- the dispirited performance in the Calderon two weeks ago a case in point- in all likelihood the summer will see a mass exodus of players, with Rossi, Nilmar (if he hasn’t already left by then) and Borja Valero all rumoured to be eyeing up the backdoor of the Madrigal.

Were that to happen reclaiming it’s place as one of Europe’s most exciting teams would be a monumental task to undertake. Roig has always been pragmatic about signings and won’t be flashing the cash to lure any big name players in so the story of the little club which punched way above it’s weight looks to be coming to a sad and somewhat overdue end.