Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Ancelotti reunion delivers the La Liga early for Real

Los Blancos clinch record-extending 35th league title with four games to spare

- Agence France-Presse

MADRID: Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti might have thought his days of winning Europe’s biggest leagues were a thing of the past but on Saturday he added La Liga to his glittering list of honours.

Madrid’s triumph, sealed with a 4-0 win against Espanyol, ensured Ancelotti becomes the only coach to have clinched all five major European league titles.

He also won the Premier League with Chelsea, Serie A with AC Milan, Ligue 1 with Paris Saint-Germain and the Bundesliga with Bayern Munich.

And while Ancelotti’s Chelsea pipped Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United to the league by a single point in 2010 the others have all been won at a canter, with Real’s latest success another emphatic and long-expected title win for Ancelotti to add to his CV.

Madrid’s victory, and particular­ly the margin of victory - they sat 17 points clear of Sevilla on Saturday with four games left to play - is in part due to the fallibilit­y of their rivals.

This was Barcelona’s first season without Lionel Messi and while the shell-shocked Catalans improved after Xavi Hernandez was appointed coach in November, they remain a club in the midst of financial recovery and a team in the early stages of transition.

Atletico Madrid, meanwhile, never looked as comfortabl­e as reigning champions as they did as challenger­s.

They spent the first half of the campaign wrestling with an identity crisis that again put the spotlight on Diego Simeone and ensured their title defence was over before it began.

Number of La Liga titles won by Real Madrid. They are the most successful Spanish club. Barcelona are the second most successful with 26 league titles

Sevilla were Madrid’s closest rivals for the majority of the season but more in terms of points than pressure. Every time an opening appeared for Julen Lopetegui’s team to step forward, they blinked.

Yet Ancelotti deserves credit too, not least because the gap Real Madrid have enjoyed is testament to their own consistenc­y, focus and individual quality, that no other side could match. Even a better Barcelona or a more assured Atletico would have surely struggled to keep up.

At the top of Ancelotti’s successes this season has been the transforma­tion of Vinicius Junior from an exciting but erratic young forward to one of the world’s most clinical strikers.

Italy’s Carlo Ancelotti has completed his ‘grand slam’, becoming the first manager to win titles in Europe’s top five leagues (AC Milan, Chelsea, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Paris St-Germain)

Benzema, meanwhile, has hit a new, stratosphe­ric level under Ancelotti, continuing his upward trajectory since the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo in 2018.

If the Frenchman wins the Ballon d’Or later this year, which seems entirely possible, Ancelotti might feel justified in claiming some of the credit.

Luka Modric has been outstandin­g again, the 36-year-old Croatian the most resounding riposte to early concerns about Ancelotti’s lack of rotation

And the Italian shored up the defence with little fuss. The departures of Sergio Ramos and Raphael Varane broke up a long-establishe­d partnershi­p but the performanc­es of Eder Militao and David Alaba have

Real Madrid have won the 2021-22 La Liga title with four games remaining, the earliest they have won since the 1989-90 campaign, when they also won with four games left

ensured neither have been missed.

Most of all, though, Ancelotti has done what the club hired him to do: He stabilised a team that might easily have been reeling from the losses of an iconic captain in Ramos and an historic coach in Zinedine Zidane. He has maintained order and calm, while settling promising youngsters and sustaining seasoned veterans.

When Florentino Perez agreed to bring Ancelotti back for a second spell last year, many wondered if the appointmen­t was overly-cautious, a backwards step among the cluster of super-clubs with younger and more progressiv­e coaches at the helm.

But Ancelotti’s gratitude for a

Number of goals scored by Karim Benzema in La Liga this season. He is set to win the Pichichi, the award for the Spanish league's top scorer, for the first time in his career

return to a level he thought no longer possible in the twilight years of his career has reverberat­ed at Real Madrid, his carefree attitude creating a sense of a club protected from pressure and unaffected by outside noise.

“The president called me when nobody expected it. I’m happy here, and we’re going to continue to take the club forward,” said Ancelotti.

Eden Hazard and Gareth Bale were relegated to the sidelines with respect and without retributio­n. A 4-0 defeat by Barcelona at home, for which Ancelotti was at least partially responsibl­e, could have undermined everything but instead it became a blip, the team responding and Ancelotti recovering.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Real Madrid players celebrate with coach Carlo Ancelotti after beating Espanyol 4-0 to win the La Liga on Saturday.
REUTERS Real Madrid players celebrate with coach Carlo Ancelotti after beating Espanyol 4-0 to win the La Liga on Saturday.

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