Sportstar

In the end there was joy. The joy of proving the detractors wrong, the joy of playing through pain and

On the nal day of the season, Atletico Madrid held on to a 21 lead against Real Valladolid in the nal minute of stoppage time, while its closest challenger Real Madrid overturned a 01 decit to score twice in the nal few minutes against Villarreal.

- AASHIN PRASAD

suffering, the joy of nally scaling the pinnacle of Spanish football once again, as Atletico Madrid won its rst La Liga crown in seven years.

In the end there was joy. The joy of proving the detractors wrong, the joy of playing through pain and suffering, the joy of nally scaling the pinnacle of Spanish football once again.

It was a scrap past the nish line for Atletico Madrid despite the club topping the league table for the 25 previous game weeks and holding a 10point advantage over its nearest rival at the end of January. On the nal day of the season, the closest challenger and neighbour Real Madrid overturned a 01 deficit to score twice in the nal few minutes of its match against Villarreal. And at Real Valladolid, Atletico manager Diego Simeone was franticall­y directing traffic on the technical area in the nal minute of stoppage time to hold on to a 21 lead. When the nal whistle came, all the suffering gave way to a collective sigh of relief and the celebratio­ns began.

It was Atletico’s rst La Liga crown in seven years, the moment made extra special by the hundreds of fans who had travelled north and gathered outside the car park of Jose Zorrilla Stadium. With little regard for

Covid-19 regulation­s, the players joined in with the fans to get the party started.

Atletico’s championsh­ip win was built on the foundation­s of its defensive structure, a hallmark of Simeone’s decadelong tenure. The club conceded just 25 goals — the secondbest defensive record in Europe’s top ight — picking up from its previous campaigns, when it let in 27 (201920), 29 (’1819) and 22 (’1718) goals. The club nished second, second and third, respective­ly, in those seasons.

To take it to the next level, the side needed a cutting edge to its attacking dimension to complement its solidity at the back. After the departure of Antoine Griezmann to Barcelona, Atletico lacked a match winner in its books. It signed Joao Felix, an exciting 19yearold attacker, for a clubrecord fee in 2019, but he has found it hard to settle in Simeone’s demanding system. Joao Felix remains one for the future, while Atleti needed one for the present.

The Suarez zone

Enter Luis Suarez. Cast aside for being past his prime by former Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu, the 33yearold Suarez was hurting, but for Simeone he was exactly what he needed.

The Uruguayan topscored with 21 goals in the La Liga campaign. Fifteen of the 21 were either goahead, gametying or gamewinnin­g goals, such was his influence.

Ahead of the penultimat­e game of the season, Simeone described the setting as: “We have entered the Suarez zone.”

Suarez had drawn a blank in his eight previous games. But his manager felt “it is an ideal moment for a footballer like him to nd and solve the game situations that the team will need. He is used to games like this and has the experience to do it.”

In the penultimat­e game week against Osasuna, Atleti was down a goal until the 82nd minute, and it was Suarez who came up with the match winner in the 88th minute. It was again left to him to score the titleclinc­hing goal in the 67th minute on the nal day of the season. It was the redemption he had craved.

“At the start of the season, with the way I was underestim­ated... Atletico Madrid opened the door for me, to keep showing that I’m still valid,” a tearful Suarez told Movistar. “A lot of people have suered with me. My wife, my kids, they’re with me daytoday. I’ve been in football for many years and this is the year they’ve suered the most.”

Atletico had a 10point lead at the end of January before it lost ground to set up a tantalisin­g nish. The side was without Joao Felix, Thomas Lemar, Hector Herrera, Moussa Dembele, Mario Hermoso and Yannick Carrasco from the end of January to the second week of February due to Covid-19. Defender Kieran Trippier served a 10week ban between December and February. Atleti’s poor away form — two wins from eight matches before the nal match day — allowed Real and Barcelona to close the gap.

Duopoly broken

Real’s push for the title was impressive on two counts. Only Karim Benzema (23 goals) managed to hit the doubledigi­t mark for goalscorin­g and the squad had plenty of injuries and Covid-related concerns to contend with. Skipper Sergio Ramos and centreback partner Raphael Varane missed the nal stretch of the season, Eden Hazard was on the periphery once again and defender Dani Carvajal was out for the majority of the season. While both Atletico and Barca had 10 different outfield players make more than 30 appearance­s in the league, Real had only six do so. During Zinedine Zidane’s time as Real manager, the club has sought to invest in youth rather than take the Galactico approach. However, since Cristiano Ronaldo’s departure in 2018, Real has scored just 67 (202021), 70 (’1920) and 63 (’1819) goals in the league when compared to the 94 (’1719), 106 (’1617) and 110 (’1516) goals in the three seasons preceding his exit.

Barca was unsettled before the ball got rolling in the season with the sale of Suarez, talisman Lionel Messi threatenin­g to leave and an underwhelm­ing transfer window. Ronald Koeman was coerced out of his Netherland­s job in late August. Barca had a slow start to the season picking up just four wins from its rst 10 matches.

Despite letting Suarez go, Barca managed to score 85 goals, 18 more than each of the Madrid clubs. Messi struck 30 goals and set up nine to re Barca in attack. What hurt the club most was its lapses in defence. Barca conceded 3■ goals, 13 more than Atletico and 10 more than secondplac­ed Real. Barcelona lost eight crucial points from winning positions in the last six matches and ultimately nished seven points behind titlewinne­r Atletico.

The seven previous titles were shared by Real and Barca — the two biggest clubs in Spain and arguably the world. But Atletico under Simeone has carved its own space at the top of La Liga.

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 ?? AP ?? Long wait: Atletico Madrid lifted its rst La Liga trophy in seven years.
AP Long wait: Atletico Madrid lifted its rst La Liga trophy in seven years.
 ?? AP ?? A demanding system: Atletico manager Diego Simeone waits for his team to receive the trophy at its home stadium, the Wanda Metropolit­ano, a day after winning the title. Atletico’s championsh­ip win was built on the foundation­s of its defensive structure, a hallmark of Simeone’s decadelong tenure.
AP A demanding system: Atletico manager Diego Simeone waits for his team to receive the trophy at its home stadium, the Wanda Metropolit­ano, a day after winning the title. Atletico’s championsh­ip win was built on the foundation­s of its defensive structure, a hallmark of Simeone’s decadelong tenure.
 ?? AP ?? Redemption: Atletico Madrid's Luis Suarez celebrates with fans after winning the title. The Uruguayan topscored with 21 goals in the La
Liga campaign. Fifteen of the 21 were either goahead, gametying or gamewinnin­g goals, such was his inuence.
AP Redemption: Atletico Madrid's Luis Suarez celebrates with fans after winning the title. The Uruguayan topscored with 21 goals in the La Liga campaign. Fifteen of the 21 were either goahead, gametying or gamewinnin­g goals, such was his inuence.

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