Daily Dispatch

Fresh challenge for Barca and Madrid

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“I’ve missed this place,” Lionel Messi said after stepping onto Camp Nou for the first time in three months, but when Barcelona return to action he knows it will not be the same.

La Liga’s frenzied title race will take another step into the unknown as Barca run out into the biggest and now emptiest stadium in Europe after Real Madrid switch to a different home altogether.

Two points separate Spain’s greatest rivals ahead of the return to top-flight games on Thursday, when the derby between Sevilla and Real Betis will end a 93-day hiatus and launch a five-week sprint to the finish.

When games were suspended on March 12, Madrid had handed first place back to Barcelona, just after beating them at the Santiago Bernabeu.

Given the many frailties of the two teams, few could predict who will emerge the stronger from the final 11 games of the season but a fresh factor will be who adapts better to strange surroundin­gs.

Instead of their 81,000-capacity stadium in the city-centre, under renovation this summer, Real Madrid will play at the 6,000-seater Alfredo di Stefano Stadium, usually the home of the club’s reserve and Under-18 teams, at their training ground in the northern suburbs.

Barcelona will trade the advantage of Europe’s largest home crowd for the challenge of its most empty arena, where the absence of fans will feel starker than anywhere else.

“It’s the first time we have to play games without the fans,” Madrid’s Toni Kroos said earlier in June. “The team that adjusts best to this situation is the one that will win.”

For Barca, it will not be the first time.

Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets, Gerard Pique, Sergi Roberto, Jordi Alba and MarcAndre ter Stegen all played against Las Palmas in October 2017, when the club closed its doors at Camp Nou in protest against the game going ahead amid political unrest.

They won 3-0 but this time there are five home games to navigate, including Atletico Madrid.

Leganes and Espanyol, 19th and 20th respective­ly, may feel emboldened too. “I love that connection with the fans, it’s what allows us to feel those moments of happiness, to live them,” Barca’s Arturo Vidal said. “But we will have to adapt.”

On Saturday, the team held their first full training session at Camp Nou in almost seven years. Real Madrid have been trying to acclimatis­e too, with Zinedine Zidane overseeing regular meetings at their new ground.

Dani Carvajal, Sergio Ramos, Casemiro, Fede Valverde, Vinicius Junior, Lucas Vazquez and Rodrygo all came through the ranks playing at Alfredo di Stefano.

Yet six home games against Eibar, Valencia, Mallorca, Getafe, Alaves and Villarreal offer no guarantees and, unlike Barcelona’s opponents, those teams will not even feel a historic anxiety.

If home advantage is less certain, Barcelona could suffer most. They have collected the most home points so far in the division and nine more than Real Madrid.

But if they find away points are easier to collect, Barcelona have more room for improvemen­t than Real. The unknowns make an erratic title race even more unpredicta­ble.

 ?? Picture: JUAN MEDINA/REUTERS ?? BATTLE: Barcelona’s Lionel Messi in action against Real Madrid’s Casemiro at the Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid.
Picture: JUAN MEDINA/REUTERS BATTLE: Barcelona’s Lionel Messi in action against Real Madrid’s Casemiro at the Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid.

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