Irish Sunday Mirror

JUDE IS LOOKING AT HIS OPTIONS AND WILL PICK THE REAL WINNER

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IF anyone is surprised Jude Bellingham seems likely to choose Real Madrid over the Premier League, they were clearly not paying attention in the summer of 2020.

Bellingham could have had his pick of English clubs at that time, having been famously courted by Manchester United.

For his developmen­t, the teenager decided Borussia Dortmund and the Bundesliga were the best places for his developmen­t.

Now, it looks like the 19-year-old believes the Bernabeu and La Liga are the best places for the next stage of his developmen­t.

The money will be decent, of course, but even if it is not far off £300,000 a week, there are Premier League clubs who would match the numbers.

So perhaps – unthinkabl­e as it seems to the Premier League’s legion of cheerleadi­ng pundits – Bellingham considers the Spanish game to be a more attractive place to grow as a player.

It is an idea that makes so many blinkered observers of our league reel with incredulit­y.

How can you prefer a league that is so predictabl­e, they say, as Manchester City prepare to win a fifth Premier league title in six seasons? How can you prefer a competitio­n that has so little strength in depth compared to the Premier League? That’s an interestin­g one. It did not say a massive amount about the Premier League’s strength in depth when Sevilla, currently 11th in La Liga, knocked Manchester United out of the Europa League.

The Europa League is a type of barometer for domestic strength in depth and, since 2013-14, Spain have had 11 semi-finalists and six winners.

England have had nine semi-finalists and two winners. If the Europa

League is a barometer of strength in depth, the Champions League is a reflection of elite excellence and, since 2013-14, Spain have had 14 semi-finalists and six winners.

England have had 10 semi-finalists and two winners.

Let’s be really honest here, most of us do not see enough of other nations’ domestic leagues to make a truly informed judgement on their standards.

What we do know is that the Premier League is by far the richest league in the world and is, by far, the most watched, the most commercial­ly attractive, the most envied by boardrooms across the club football world.

By all those measures, it is a phenomenal success.

But that is not to mean there is no equally compelling and skilful football being played in the big wide world.

Perhaps Bellingham looks at La Liga and thinks it is of a greater technical level than the Premier League.

One thing is for sure, he will look at the Real Madrid squad and believe he can flourish.

He can flourish by learning from Toni Kroos and Luka Modric (if they stay) and he can flourish by operating alongside the talent of young players such as Eduardo Camavinga, Aurelien Tchouameni and Federico Valverde (though none is as young as Jude).

While he is well-equipped to deal with it, perhaps the blood and thunder of the Premier League is not part of his developmen­t plan just now.

And, considerin­g how his move to Dortmund has turned out, who can doubt him?

Yes, it will be a shame if we don’t see Bellingham in the Premier League any time soon.

But, in the interests of the player himself – and that’s what counts, of course – this could be the perfect move.

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