Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Liverpool

Madrid’s Liverpool clash will test Perez’s Super League claims

Even if Real Madrid are not in an outright disastrous position at this halfway stage of the revamped Champions League, there’s no escaping the fact that they are in a precarious — not to say embarrassing — one.

With Wednesday’s fixture against Liverpool at Anfield staring them aggressively in the face, at a time when Los Blancos’ injury list is debilitating and when Carlo Ancelotti’s team has shown its vulnerable side, they lie midtable, which is to say 18th, and two points off the relegation zone.Before we go any further, ask yourself this: can you ever remember Real Madrid being midtable, 18th or two points above the relegation zone in anything, in your life, ever?

OK, there’s no actual need for panic.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Including this visit to the Premier League and Champions League leaders, the European champions have four games left to elevate themselves either into a safer position, which will bring a playoff in the spring, or to automatic qualification for the quarterfinals if they can claw their way into the top eight.But if Madrid are beaten in the northwest of England — and that’s not wholly improbable — they could be overtaken by a handful of teams such as Bayern Munich, Atletico Madrid, AC Milan or Benfica, and could slip further towards the bottom of the 36-team league where the peril begins to look grave.

The hard fact is that despite two recent domestic thumpings handed out to lower-level teams, the current European champions go to Anfield with far too many problems in their haversacks. Their absentee list of injured stars includes: Éder Militão, David Alaba, Dani Carvajal, Aurélien Tchouaméni, Rodrygo and, crucially, Vinícius Júnior. Horrible.

They still have a robust squad, and they’ll still field an XI which would be the envy of many clubs in the upper echelons of world football — but that’s a hemorrhage of extraordinarily gutsy, talented, experienced, high-quality staff they’ve suffered.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Last season, Ancelotti’s team became champions despite a series of crippling injuries, but never so many at the same time. There is a balancing factor in that Thibaut Courtois returns in goal, which is of absolutely monumental importance. Jude Bellingham is returning to form, and Lucas Vázquez will be able to travel with the squad and potentially play at right-back.

Still, losing Vinícius to hamstring injury is a huge blow to Madrid, especially against Liverpool. The Brazilian has been a perpetual nightmare for the Premier League side. The Spanish champions have an extraordinary recent record against the Reds, losing to them competitively only twice, not suffering defeat for 15 years, and beating Liverpool in two recent Champions League finals.Vinícius has been at the heart of a lot of this, producing goals and assists (seven in total) to torment the Anfield men. This season, in all competitions, the devastating Brazilian has contributed 20 goals — scoring or assisting — in only 18 appearances. What a loss.

Vinícius has been at the heart of a lot of this, producing goals and assists (seven in total) to torment the Anfield men. This season, in all competitions, the devastating Brazilian has contributed 20 goals — scoring or assisting — in only 18 appearances. What a loss.But whether or not Madrid confirm their perpetual “You can’t damage us, we’re Teflon!” attitude and win, or are defeated and forced to lick their wounds and then prepare for “Everyone on deck!” over the remaining three fixtures, it’s worth pointing out that this situation has helped expose more of Florentino Perez’s hypocrisy.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

I don’t think it was a good weekend for Madrid’s president, who used the annual general meeting to trumpet his views to the members of the club and, by association, via the media to the entire world. He trotted out some nonsense about how Vinícius would have won the Ballon d’Or if it weren’t for the odd behaviour of voting nations such as Uganda, Namibia, Albania and Finland.It was nothing more than a swipe of a haughty billionaire’s arm at the boardroom table.

He unilaterally dismissed these countries’ footballing worth or relevance. In his diatribe, he was clear that from his standpoint the people voting from these countries were nobody, and known to nobody. He treated their international credibility in a humiliating manner.What he forgot to take into account was that these nations gave votes and points to Karim Benzema or Courtois when the Frenchman won and the Belgian placed seventh in the 2022 Ballon d’Or. There was no complaining then: simply, a quiet satisfaction that the serfs had voted the way that they were supposed to vote.

Perez was hypocritical then, but still more so when throwing mud at the Champions League format. Perez went on to claim that a one-year-old European court ruling had freed soccer from the tyrannical yoke of FIFA and UEFA. Twelve months on and, don’t forget, nothing specific has happened because of that ruling. But Madrid’s president still considered it important to imply that the sport had enjoyed a ludicrous emancipation.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

It seemed nonsensical on its own, but he compounded the error by warbling on about his beloved Super League project, stating that there was growing support for it and ignoring the fact that he and his allies were not only roundly defeated the last time they brought this project to the table, but also humiliated by the ineptitude of their timing, their communication and by the way in which a landslide of general football opinion went against them.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

NFL

‎ The New England Patriots are gearing up for a crucial offseason, with the combine and free agency on the horizon. In this article,...

NFL

OFFICIAL: Steelers Lock In Franchise Star — T.J. Watt Signs Three-Year, $40.5 Million Contract Extension to Anchor Pittsburgh Defense Through 2027   Pittsburgh, PA...

Duke Blue devils

In a stunning turn of events, Duke phenom Cooper Flagg has found himself at the center of a high-stakes scenario that could change the...

Advertisement