Sowetan

LAST REAL CHALLENGE AT THE CALDERON

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BARCELONA – Breaking Atletico Madrid’s recent strangleho­ld on a fixture that used to be a foregone conclusion for Real Madrid is the challenge facing coach Zinedine Zidane ahead of tomorrow’s Madrid derby, the last at the Vicente Calderon. Real enjoyed utter domination over their rivals for 14 years but the tables have turned and they have not won a league derby since Jose Mourinho oversaw a 2-1 win at the Calderon in 2013. Atletico have won four and drawn two of the past six league derbies, just one demonstrat­ion of how charismati­c coach Diego Simeone has transforme­d the fortunes of the sleeping giant he took over in December 2011. “He is a coach with a unique capacity to communicat­e, that’s why he has got where he is and why he was able to dig us out of the trouble we were in,” said Atletico captain Gabi, who has won the La Liga title, King’s Cup and reached two Champions League finals under Simeone.

“With one look or gesture he’s able to speak to any player, and that’s why at the moment the most important thing for this club is the fact we have Simeone with us.”

Real still have the upper hand on their neighbours in European competitio­n and Saturday’s game is the first meeting between the teams since Real’s penalty shootout victory in the Champions League final last May.

The game takes on extra significan­ce for being the last league derby at the Vicente Calderon stadium with Atletico due to move from the 50-year-old ground to a new 67 000-capacity arena next year.

“That it will be the last derby at the Calderon makes it exciting and special. We have had unforgetta­ble moments there,” Gabi said.

Champions Barcelona host Malaga hours before the derby and will be looking to capitalise on any slip from Real.

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