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Bitterswee­t sympathy will have to wait for Lopetegui

SPANIARD HAS HAD A RAPID FALL FROM GRACE IN JUST A FEW MONTHS

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In time, perhaps, there will be a little sympathy for Julen Lopetegui, the man who lost the two biggest jobs in Spanish football in the space of 139 days. On reflection, even those who still feel disappoint­ed or betrayed may recognise the poignancy in the tale of a coach, who spent 15 years trying to fulfil his dream, only for it to fall apart in less than five months.

For now, though, that remains a distant prospect. On Monday night, Real Madrid issued a brisk, terse statement confirming Lopetegui’s long-anticipate­d dismissal after the team’s 5-1 humiliatio­n by Barcelona in the first Clasico of the season on Sunday.

Lopetegui, 52, had been in charge for just 14 games. He had won six and lost six. Real, the reigning European champions, sit ninth in La Liga. The club’s board said it thought it had to act now “while the objectives for the season can still be attained”.

Outside of his immediate family — his father, Jose Antonio Lopetegui, had complained in an interview that he had been “robbed of 50 goals” when the club sold Cristiano Ronaldo just a few weeks after Lopetegui arrived — the news produced little sorrow.

Lopetegui has become a parable on the perils of ambition, a case study of the dangers of hubris.

To many, after all, he was the man who sacrificed Spain’s World Cup campaign on the altar of his own ambition. Just three days before Spain’s first game in Russia this summer, Real Madrid announced that Lopetegui — Spain’s manager at the time — had agreed to become the club’s coach after the tournament.

Lopetegui had not lost any of his 20 games in charge of Spain’s senior team, who were among the favourites to win the World Cup. The announceme­nt, though, infuriated Luis Rubiales, the head of the Spanish football federation; he thought Lopetegui and Madrid had humiliated the national team.

Over the course of a long night at Spain’s base in Krasnodar after the news broke, Rubiales determined that he had no choice but to fire Lopetegui. Fernando Hierro, the technical director, stepped in as coach at the last moment. The squad was divided on whether it was the right decision. Once the tournament began, Spain sputtered and struggled, and were eliminated in the round of 16 by Russia. Lopetegui was not the only one to attract public scorn. Florentino Perez, Real’s president, was widely condemned for putting partisan matters before national interests. He was accused of derailing the national team in order to flex Madrid’s muscles, to project his own power.

In reality, however, Perez was not proving his strength so much as demonstrat­ing his weakness. He had been caught unaware earlier in the summer when Zinedine Zidane decided to resign as manager, and he had already been turned down by a number of coaches — Mauricio Pochettino of Tottenham, Juventus’ Massimilia­no Allegri, Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp — in his search for a replacemen­t.

When he settled on Lopetegui, a week or so before the World Cup, he petitioned the coach to allow him to publicly announce it. Lopetegui wanted to wait until after the tournament, but Perez was adamant. His logic was telling — and, in hindsight, a clear red flag: He was worried that a poor tournament for Spain would diminish the size of Real’s coup. He did not rush to announce Lopetegui’s arrival because he was so proud of the appointmen­t; he did so because he was worried that Lopetegui would fail.

Lopetegui had similar concerns. Jorge Mendes, the Portuguese super agent, had encouraged Lopetegui to believe he could be the next Real Madrid manager for at least a year. Mendes had planted the seed in Perez’s mind in the first place. Lopetegui — whose elite club experience amounted to one unhappy, 20-month spell at Porto — suspected he was not ready for a job of that scale.

He was proved right, of course. So, too, were Perez’s concerns. And the consequenc­es will be expensive: Reports in Spain suggest Madrid will have to pay the remainder of Lopetegui’s contract, at a cost of around 15 million euros. Santiago Solari has been promoted from the club’s youth team to replace him temporaril­y. A more permanent successor, possibly the former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte, will cost many millions more.

But in Lopetegui’s mind, he had no choice. It is here, perhaps, that history will be a little kinder to him, in time. True, he may not have been right to accept the Madrid job at all on the eve of a World Cup. And he was almost certainly wrong to allow it to be made public without consulting Rubiales and his employers at the Spanish federation.

But he cannot be blamed for taking the job, for accepting the invitation to fulfil his dream. Nor does all of the blame for his failure lie with him.

Years Lopetegui dreamt of coaching Real

days his dream lasted after being sacked

Games he lost during his time as Spain coach

Lopetegui cannot be blamed for taking the job, for accepting the invitation to fulfil his dream. Nor does all of the blame for his failure lie with him.

 ?? AFP ?? Julen Lopetegui had mixed fortunes as boss of Real Madrid. In his 14 games, he had won six and lost six before losing his dream job.
AFP Julen Lopetegui had mixed fortunes as boss of Real Madrid. In his 14 games, he had won six and lost six before losing his dream job.

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