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Super Cup in Riyadh begins run of Madrid derby clashes

- IAN HAWKEY

You can take a Madrid derby 3,000 miles away from the capital of Spain, but no distance will ever blunt its sharp edge. No sooner had the identity of the referee taking charge of tonight’s Super Cup semi-final, Real versus Atletico, been revealed than the snarling and the grumbling began.

He is Javier Alberoja Rojas and he arrived in Riyadh for the opening fixture of the three-match event to a familiar chorus of scepticism from Real Madrid’s own club TV channel.

Alberoja Rojas would have anticipate­d as much. Real supporters and several senior figures within the club complained long and loud about his officiatin­g after they lost 3-1 at Atletico in late September, their sole defeat so far in a season where they hold the leadership of La Liga at the midway stage and won six out of six in the Champions League group phase.

The gripes reveal more about the complainan­ts than the referee, who is perceived to have allowed Atletico too much leeway in isolated moments of robustness during the last derby. But Alberoja Rojas was not the weak point in that fixture. Real’s lax marking and difficulti­es defending crosses were.

Atletico’s Alvaro Morata, the centre-forward who began his career at Real, scored twice, and Antoine Griezmann made it three headed goals to sink their local rivals.

If the manner of that loss raised concerns for Real head coach Carlo Ancelotti, the injury issues that have afflicted his squad pose further questions for Real against the one side who have worked out how to beat them in 2023-24. The season began with the major setback of long-term injury to goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois, and while Real quickly signed Kepa Arrizabala­ga on loan from Chelsea to cover Courtois’ absence, the habit of sharing and rotating between Kepa and Andriy Lunin hints at a longing for Courtois’s authority. Ancelotti would not reveal yesterday which of his fit goalkeeper­s will start the game.

He is short of senior defenders, too. First-choice centre-back Eder Militao was ruled out for several months early in the season and last month David Alaba, the most worldly of Madrid’s central defenders, went under the surgeon’s knife to repair a similar cruciate ligament problem as Courtois and Militao’s.

Also missing from the expedition to Riyadh is Lucas Vazquez, the all-rounder who provides cover at full-back. The overall deficit of experience may yet push Real into signing a defender in the January transfer window.

The fact there is now the sudden prospect of Atletico severely denting their neighbours’ hopes in three different competitio­ns in the space of a month unsettles Ancelotti a little further. The draw for the last 16 of the Copa del Rey, Spain’s main domestic Cup, has paired the two biggest Madrid clubs. They will meet at Atletico’s Metropolit­ano stadium eight days after the Riyadh showdown sends one of them through to Sunday’s Super Cup final against either Barcelona or Osasuna.

And there’s more in this intense, suffocatin­g series of derbies. The second Real-Atletico clash of the La Liga season is scheduled for February 3, by which time Real could plausibly be playing catch up in the table. Their lead is currently held jointly with Girona.

The challenge for Real is to both avenge the autumn defeat to Atletico and push past them in pursuit of a clean sweep of trophies. “It’s a motivation,” said Fede Valverde, part of Madrid’s Super Cup winning sides in 2020 and 2022. “Three derbies and the chance to show we can compete for several titles.”

On current standings, Atletico are in a scrap to even finish in the top four and guarantee themselves a place in next season’s Champions League.

But no opponent has left Real looking so exposed in 2023-24 and Ancelotti says he would prefer a diary without three city derbies stacked so close to one another. “The calendar is what it is. Personally, I’d rather it wasn’t like this. Atleti are a very tough side,” he said.

“The last derby did us a lot of damage. But it looks like we’ve sorted those problems out and this time we can produce a better version of what we are.”

As for referee Alberoja Rojas, like it or not, audiences will be hearing more from him than usual. The dialogues between on-pitch officials and VAR will be broadcast to the viewing public in an innovation that Spanish football intends to pursue in the future. “If it improves communicat­ion, all the better,” said Ancelotti.

There is now the sudden prospect of Atletico denting their neighbours’ hopes in three different competitio­ns

 ?? Getty Images ?? Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti has tough decisions to make ahead of the Super Cup, particular­ly over his goalkeeper
Getty Images Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti has tough decisions to make ahead of the Super Cup, particular­ly over his goalkeeper

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