Perfil (Sabado)

Tigre’s exploits create turning point for Argentina’s top flight

ARGENTINE FOOTBALL Tigre have been in sparkling form since coach Néstor Gorosito took over, finishing the Superliga with a flourish. And their fine performanc­es may finally put an end to the controvers­ial promedios system that decides relegation.

- BY DAN EDWARDS @DANEDWARDS­GOAL

They are the team that, under the tutelage of perma-tanned, 1970shairc­ut-sportingco­ach Néstor Gorosito, have become oneofthebe­stinArgent­ineover the last few months, finishing the Superliga season with a flourish before fighting to the final of the Copa Superliga. They are also condemned to play next year in the Nacional B – a fact that left CONMEBOL facing ridicule, put the Argentine Football Associatio­n (AFA) and Superliga at loggerhead­s and may also finally destroy the average points relegation system.

It is fair to say that 2019 has been, to put it mildly, an eventful year so far for everyone connected with Tigre.

El Matador have been in sparkling form over the course of the year. Mired in deep relegation trouble at the start of 2019 – having won just four of their first 18 matches – the arrival of Gorosito galvanised the team, which almost overnight began performing like title challenger­s.

Their last seven outings in the Superliga yielded five wins and two draws, a run that saw them shoot up the standings and take a commendabl­e ninth place. It was not enough, however, to beat the drop. Despite finishing outside the relegation standings in each of the three campaigns quantified for the purposes of the average points ta

ble, Tigre went into their last match needing a win over River Plate and for rivals Patronato to drop points. River were indeed dispatched 3-2 in a thrilling match at the Monumental but Patronato’s simultaneo­us defeat of Argentinos Juniors sealed El Matador’s fate.

At that point, things became rather murky. Tigre were forced to give up their Copa Sudamerica­na place to Huracán as a consequenc­e of relegation – an outcome that is long-standing in the Argentine top flight and relatively free of controvers­y. In the subsequent Copa Superliga, though, organised by the league itself, no such exception exists. With the promise of a Libertador­es place to the winner, CONMEBOL watched on as Gorosito’s men downed Colón, Unión, champions Racing Club and thrashed Atlético Tucumán in the semi-final first leg to put a foot in next year’s competitio­n. The South American governing body did not exactly cover itself in glory with its reaction to events.

WITHOUT PRECEDENT

On May 21, the organisati­on released a statement explicitly banning any team from outside its nation’s top flight from participat­ing in either the Libertador­es or Sudamerica­na in 2020, a move completely without precedent on a continenta­l level. That communiqué could only have been aimed at Tigre, who – given final opponent Boca Juniors’ prior qualificat­ion to the Libertador­es – would be assured of their own place by merely playing the final.

Incredibly, that resolution lasted barely 24 hours. The following day CONMEBOL backtracke­d entirely, in the process uncovering an internal struggle between Superliga authoritie­s and the AFA, entirely unamused that their supposed partners had promised Copa qualificat­ion in a tournament outside the associatio­n’s remit. The upshot is that the prohibitio­n on lower league teams has been suspended until 2021, leaving Tigre free to combine their efforts to make it back to Superliga with a shot at continenta­l glory.

The big question of course, is whether or not the Buenos Aires club should be in the Nacional B in the first place. AFA President Claudio ‘ Chiqui’ Tapia certainly believes they deserve to stay in the top flight.

“The Superliga has its autonomy. We made the decision to remove average points in the lower leag ues to simplif y football,” he told TyC Sports, in a rather disingenuo­us criticism that overlooked the fact that the AFA itself had introduced the feared ‘ promedios’ and maintained them for over 30 years. “Now we have an exemplary case, but the rules were accepted in that way. In a sporting sense it is unfair.”

Such was the uproar caused by the Tigre case that 14 clubs signed a document calling for the immediate eradicatio­n of the average points relegation system in May. The initiative was perhaps inevitably watered down, with the most likely scenario being the phasing out of promedios over the next two seasons, coinciding with the reduction of Superliga clubs to a more manageable 20 or 22 which would allow the playing of a traditiona­l-length season.

In the short-term at least, Tigre go into Sunday’s final in Córdoba at least on equal standing with Boca, who have shown little of the flair and goalscorin­g potential of their rivals as they have stumbled into this final. Players like exquisite veteran playmaker Walter Montillo, striker Federico González and unflappabl­e holding midfielder Lucas Menossi are just a few of the stars who have come to the fore under Gorosito and who are sure to give Boca an uncomforta­ble evening, whatever the final result.

hat may happen down the line is more difficult to predict. Relegated sides have a tendency to fall apart, a phenomenon which will likely only be accelerate­d by the brilliant form Tigre’sbestplaye­rshaveshow­n since going down a division. But one thing is clear: El Matador’s Copa Superliga exploits will act as a turning-point for the Argentine top flight, which perhaps never before has seen the arbitrary and illogical nature of promedios exposed in quite so flagrant a manner.

It is fair to say that 2019 has been, to put it mildly, an eventful year so far for everyone connected with Tigre.

 ?? NA: MARIANO SANCHEZ ?? Tigre celebratio­ns
NA: MARIANO SANCHEZ Tigre celebratio­ns

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