REAL MADRID BLOWS HOT AND COLD
Clasico match with Barcelona set this weekend
MADRID, Spain (AFP) — Real Madrid won La Liga only three months ago because of its defensive steel and a relentless will to win but ahead of Saturday’s Clasico against Barcelona, it appears to be a team unravelling.
After losing 1-0 at home to Cadiz for the first time in their history last weekend, Madrid fell 3-2 in the Champions League on Wednesday to Shakhtar Donetsk, which had 10 first team players and nine staff missing due to coronavirus infections.
Just as Cadiz had waltzed almost at will through the same Madrid defense that conceded only 25 league goals last season, Shakhtar wreaked havoc in Zinedine Zidane’s back-line and on another night would have scored more.
The three goals they did chalk up in 13 wild first-half minutes was the same number Madrid shipped in its first nine games following La Liga’s resumption last season.
And while there is no measure for commitment or concentration, it was clear both against Cadiz and Shakhtar that some of Madrid’s players had lost their edge.
Lethargic performances, where the pressing was slack and the passing imprecise, suggest this team is not as tuned in as they were in June and July.
“We lacked a bit of everything but above all our confidence, which is the most important thing,” Zidane said.
In some ways, perhaps, this is not a regression but a return to form for Zidane’s Madrid, which have often excelled with a trophy in sight but floundered during the day-to-day grind.
Before lockdown in Spain compressed the run-in and sharpened their focus,
Madrid was already a team suffering from inconsistency.
In February and
March, it won only three times in eight games, slipping up against opponents such as Real Sociedad,
Celta Vigo,
Levante and
Real Betis.
This time last year, Madrid had just lost away at Real Mallorca to make it five wins from 11 games and leave Zidane on the brink of the sack.
It is to Zidane’s credit they turned their form around, doing just enough to keep pace with Barcelona and then pull away from them when it mattered.
We lacked a bit of everything but above all our confidence, which is the most important thing.
Zidane extracted the maximum from an ageing squad that he was promised would be refreshed but, two years on, still feels all too familiar.
Like Barcelona, Madrid has found the financial implications of the pandemic made swift or serious change impossible.
The transfer window was largely a cost-reducing exercise for Spain’s leading clubs and their quality has certainly stagnated, as Atletico Madrid demonstrated on Wednesday in its 4-0 humbling at the hands of Bayern Munich.
It means it might not be a vintage Clasico this weekend but for Madrid it has become more important now, and for Zidane too.
Two defeats in a week is one thing but three, the last of them against Barcelona, would alter the dynamic.
“I’m the coach, I have to find the solution, I didn’t find it today and it was difficult for my players,” said Zidane on Wednesday night.
Zidane has credit in the bank but he will also know this run cannot continue, especially with Champions League games coming thick and fast over the next few weeks.
The demanding schedule appeals to Zidane’s inclinations to rotate but he may have learned this week that his squad has its limitations.
Ferland Mendy has proven himself a significantly more reliable option at left-back than Marcelo. Casemiro is the only suitable defensive midfielder. Luka Jovic is not able to cover for Karim Benzema.
Sergio Ramos should return as well against Barcelona, after being left out of the loss to Shakhtar with a knee injury. Madrid has lost seven out of its last eight Champions League games without him.