The Star Malaysia

Belgium’s league nothing like its stars playing abroad

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Belgium’s football stars are household names like Eden Hazard, Kevin De Bruyne, Dries Mertens – and the list could go on. Among the halfdozen top teams in the country’s league are Zulte Waregem, Ostend and Mechelen. Enough said. The contrast in fame and fortune could hardly be bigger between players and league, and the first half of this season did little to change that.

The league is providing entertainm­ent to few outside the Belgian borders. Brugge are leading the league heading into the new year with 43 points from 21 games, two points more than Anderlecht while Zulte Waregem are another point further back.

Brugge are the defending champions but, for one yardstick on the value of the league, use this one: Despite dominating in Belgium during 2016, Brugge lost every game in their Champions League group.

TITLE RACE

WITH such a dearth of talent, Belgium has found one way to make the league interestin­g through next spring – the playoffs. Normal league play is effectivel­y over in March – and the top six teams then play their own little league. To make matters more interestin­g, all points from the regular season are cut in half.

The debate is endless whether this setup crowns the best team of a season. But one thing is for sure, there is usually tension guaranteed until the last day. So up to March, teams are specifical­ly centred on getting into the top six to be assured of five more lucrative home games. If usually one “oddball” makes it in, this season could be different with Ostend and Mechelen in fourth and fifth positions at the moment.

PICK OF THE PLAYERS

IF there is one standout who has thrilled the league, it must be new arrival Lukasz Teodorczyk, a Pole already known by smitten Anderlecht fans as “Teo.”

Too bad he is still on loan from Dynamo Kiev. Teodorczyk is a simple goal-getter – few thrills but lethal in the penalty area. And with 24 goals overall since his arrival in August, including 16 in the league, he has made Anderlecht a title challenger despite often lacklustre play under new coach Rene Weiler. Teodorczyk leads the Golden Bull topscoring list by four.

Defending champions Brugge have been counting ever more on Ruud Vormer, the 28-year-old Dutch midfielder who is at his best in his third season at the club. Also in midfield, Timmy Simons could win yet another title at age 40.

EMERGING TALENT

IN a nation where players like Hazard and De Bruyne were already establishe­d stars as teenagers, the 2016 crop looks meagre.

In a sense, it’s curious that Youri Tielemans can still be seen as a young talent, since the 19-year-old has been playing with Anderlecht for three years already. Tried, tested and approved in midfield, Tielemans is looking toward making an impact on the Belgian national team in the new year.

SURPRISE PACKAGE

EVEN though Mechelen have won the league title four times in their history and even clinched the European Cup Winners Cup in 1988, they had fallen on hard times in recent years. And few would have predicted an improvemen­t when they lost top player Sofiane Hanni to Anderlecht during the summer transfer window.

But Mechelen have surged under new coach Yannick Ferrera after a lacklustre start and are now fifth with a good shot at making the playoffs.

POINTS TO PROVE

IF one team have much left to prove this season, it is Ghent, the main challenger to the traditiona­l top three of Anderlecht, Brugge and Standard Liege over the last few years. They won their first title two years ago and backed it up last year with a good run through the group stage into the second round of the Champions League.

This season, things are going from bad to worse. They lost playmaker Sven Kums but even that should not explain their dismal run which have left them seventh and on the wrong side of the playoff threshold.

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