Sunday Times

Twin empires of Spanish football strike back

James Rodriguez and Luis Suárez ensure that Barca and Real have the most formidable forward lineups the world has seen

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IN 2001, when Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez began the second summer of his Galáctico revolution with the signing of Zinedine Zidane from Juventus for a world record fee of £45-million, the only available squad number between one and 11 was No 5.

And so the greatest midfield player of his generation glided around the Bernabéu for the next five seasons with a swan-necked centrehalf’s shirt on his back.

Two years later, David Beckham turned that notion on its head when he took No 23 because Raul held the freehold on No 7, but before the marketing phenomenon arrived it was felt that 1-11 remained the most valuable slots for merchandis­ing.

When Mesut Özil signed for Arsenal last August, he left Real Madrid’s No 10 shirt vacant — which, for Pérez, must have been like leaving the most prestigiou­s property in his portfolio empty.

For a man whose entire strategy and electoral appeal are based on constant renewal each season to ramp up interest and income ever further, it was both an extravagan­ce and an opportunit­y.

Then he found the man to fill it by paying £63-million to Monaco for James Rodríguez, the Colombia attacking midfielder who scored the Brazil World Cup’s greatest goal and was arguably its best player, undoubtedl­y eclipsing the official choice of Lionel Messi of Argentina, who wears Barcelona’s No 10.

Pérez and Real Madrid are understand­ably portraying it as another coup and one that takes the spotlight away from Barcelona’s purchase of Luis Suárez.

Thousands of chalkboard-style formation graphics, or the backs of fag packets for traditiona­lists, have proliferat­ed throughout the day as amateur tacticians attempt to work out how three of the four world’s most expensive players — Gareth Bale, Cristiano Ronaldo and Rodríguez — will fit in the same team.

Last season, Ronaldo scored 51 goals in 44 league and cup appearance­s, Bale 22 in 44 and Karim Benzema 24 in 52.

In 2008-09, Barcelona became the first team for 12 seasons to score a century of La Liga goals and have managed it three more times since. Real Madrid have responded with five successive seasons of 100 league goals or more.

Carlo Ancelotti, level-headed pragmatist and elite coaching’s most sensible operator, will once again have to come up with a system to accommodat­e and assuage all his expensive assets.

If, as seems likely, Ángel di María and Sami Khedira are sold to sub- sidise some of the fee spent on Rodríguez, as Özil was last year to mitigate spending £85-million on Bale, it will signify a change away from the flexible 4-3-3/4-4-2 with which Ancelotti won the club’s 10th European Cup in May.

As he was last summer, the manager is keen to keep hold of Di María, who created more goals than anyone else last season, but reports that he was offered to Monaco as a makeweight and turned down the chance to move suggest that Pérez is willing to overrule Ancelotti.

Though Ronaldo enjoys and protects a status of first among equals, his vanity rarely infects his responsibi­lity to his team.

If he appears greedy at times it is because he believes — and a return of 256 goals in 242 games for Real Madrid bears him out — that he is the best option to score, but Rodríguez, like Bale before him, will not be starved of the ball.

Neither will Suárez at the Nou Camp when his ban for biting Giorgio Chiellini at the World Cup expires at the end of October and he forms a dazzling forward line with Messi and Neymar.

Although they struggled for fitness last season, each made 30 appearance­s, Messi continuing his ridiculous strike rate with 41 goals, the Brazil prodigy grabbing 12. Suárez joins Barcelona at a time of transforma­tion with Victor Valdes and Carles Puyol already gone and Xavi, the team’s heartbeat and puppet-master, about to depart.

With Suárez’s movement and finishing — he has scored a La Ligaesque 54 league goals in 66 games for Liverpool over the past two seasons — Barcelona’s willingnes­s to overlook his disciplina­ry record involving one ban for racism and three for biting opponents is understand­able if unpalatabl­e.

His on-field strengths are precisely what Barcelona need during this transition­al period with Ivan Rakitic joining Andrés Iniesta and Sergio Busquets in midfield and Messi forming the tip of the diamond behind Neymar and the Uruguayan.

For the past six seasons, the major currency for both clubs has been goals in freakish quantities and Suárez and Rodríguez will contribute yet more.

Two years ago when Middle East sovereign wealth fund investment revolution­ised French football, it seemed the days of the dominance of the two Spanish giants at the top end of the transfer market was at risk.

By signing Suárez and Rodríguez, Barcelona and Real Madrid have demonstrat­ed once again they have the wherewitha­l and ambition to put Paris Saint-Germain in their place.

With their benefits of tradition, lifestyle, enormous wages and glamour, they remain the destinatio­n of elite players’ dreams and the league itself endures as a self-perpetuati­ng, self-mythologis­ing showcase for the world’s best.

By winning the title last season, Atlético Madrid opened themselves up to raids on their talent from wealthier clubs. They also provoked the disputatio­us twin empires of Spanish football to strike back. — ©

 ??  ?? LIONEL MESSI
LIONEL MESSI
 ??  ?? LUIS SUÁREZ
LUIS SUÁREZ
 ??  ?? JAMES RODRIGUEZ
JAMES RODRIGUEZ
 ??  ?? GARETH BALE
GARETH BALE
 ??  ?? CRISTIANO RONALDO
CRISTIANO RONALDO
 ??  ?? NEYMAR
NEYMAR

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