Business Day

Hazard’s stuttering start gathers pace at Madrid

Injury, bad luck and off-field distractio­ns have hampered playmaker since his move to Spain

- Agency Staff Madrid AFP

Eden Hazard is beginning to show glimpses of his best form and it cannot come soon enough for Real Madrid. They play at home to Galatasara­y in the Champions League on Wednesday, when victory would put them within touching distance of qualificat­ion from Group A.

Hazard has endured a disjointed and disappoint­ing start in Spain, where expectatio­ns soared after his long-awaited €100m (R1.6bn) move from Chelsea in June. A week later, 50,000 fans streamed into the Santiago Bernabeu to see Hazard wear the shirt while some even ran to the entrances to grab a better seat.

As supporters left, Hazard was giving his first media conference underneath the stadium, telling a packed auditorium he wanted to be a galactico.

“I’m not a galactico yet, but I hope I will be one day,” he said.

But the grand opening fizzled, in part due to events off the pitch, a combinatio­n of bad luck and personal circumstan­ces that have spared the 28-year-old harsher critique from fans and journalist­s alike. On the day before Madrid’s first game of the season away at Celta Vigo, Hazard pulled a muscle in his thigh in training and had to withdraw from the squad.

He sat out three matches before making his first start, against Paris Saint-Germain, but looked off the pace and it was a night to forget as Madrid were thrashed 3-0.

Hazard was left on the bench against Osasuna amid reports that he was overweight and then scored his first goal against Granada, a delightful looping finish that finally promised to unleash the Belgian’s best.

“We know the quality of player we have and we know he is going to deliver,” said coach Zinedine Zidane in September. “Everyone expects a lot from him and he knows that. But we support him, and as the games go by I am sure he is going to be the player we want him to be in this Real Madrid team.”

But the internatio­nal break checked Hazard’s momentum and he missed Madrid’s first match back, a 1-0 loss away at Mallorca, due to the birth of his fourth child.

In the three games since, he has appeared in bursts, delivering exhilarati­ng moments such as the glorious flick inside against Galatasara­y and a run to win the penalty against Leganes.

“He sees things that other players cannot see,” Zidane said.

Yet there have been disappoint­ments too, not so much glaring errors as a general hesitance, a tendency to choose the safe option or fail to choose at all when in those attacking positions he usually relishes.

Hazard’s most impressive showing so far was arguably against Real Betis last weekend, when Madrid failed to score but he had his exuberance back, not to mention the change of pace that at times has appeared worryingly absent. He was darting through gaps rather than turning away from them, taking risks. He was unfortunat­e to see a superb goal ruled out for offside.

“Everyone wants to see Eden playing better,” Zidane said last week. “But I see him getting much better every day. He will get there in the end, for sure.”

Madrid’s goalless draw against Betis shows why Hazard’s crescendo must find its climax, and quickly, if Zidane’s team are to avoid the same problems up front that proved their undoing last season.

Despite the best efforts of Karim Benzema in recent months, the void left by Cristiano Ronaldo is still to be filled and though Hazard has never been a prolific scorer, he can enhance the numbers of others.

Those who know Hazard say he has a down-to-earth personalit­y, unfazed by attention and uninterest­ed in the razzmatazz of football. Perhaps it is one of the reasons his move to Madrid was not pushed through sooner.

But to succeed, he is likely not only to need that zip again that comes only with full fitness, but self-belief to take ownership of this Madrid side in the same way he once commanded the adoration of Stamford Bridge. /

 ?? /Oscar Del Pozo/AFP ?? Finding his feet: Eden Hazard, left, fends off Aissa Mandi of Real Betis in a La Liga match.
/Oscar Del Pozo/AFP Finding his feet: Eden Hazard, left, fends off Aissa Mandi of Real Betis in a La Liga match.

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