The Star Early Edition

Huge price adds to massive pressure on Coutinho

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BARCELONA: Philippe Coutinho arrives at Barcelona bearing both his huge price tag and the legacy of the long line of Brazilian stars who have dazzled at Camp Nou.

The comparison­s will be constant with Neymar, whose world-record move to Paris Saint-Germain in August provided Barcelona with the €160million (about R2.4bn) they needed to acquire Coutinho at a cost that would have seemed ludicrousj­ust six months before. Only Neymar and PSG teammate Kylian Mbappe surpass it.

But while Neymar, as before him Ronaldinho, Rivaldo, Ronaldo and Romario, all became fan favorites by staring in Barcelona’s attack, Coutinho will have to measure up to the Spanish club’s long line of top-notch – and largely homegrown – midfielder­s.

The 25-year-old Coutinho will come to Spain charged with the daunting task of one day taking over as its midfield leader with Andres Iniesta entering the twilight of his career at age 33.

Coutinho can count on the big advantage of setting up Lionel Messi for goals as he strives to justify the clubrecord fee Barcelona agreed to pay on Saturday, when it finally pried him away from Liverpool after the English club had refused to let him go in the summer.

Even though coach Ernesto Valverde has successful­ly kept Barcelona winning after prediction­s of decline abounded following the unwanted departure of Neymar, Coutinho will greatly increase his options in a midfield that is still heavily reliant on Iniesta for its playmaking spark.

His signing signals Barcelona’s intention to refocus on the patch of the pitch that has defined their passing style for decades, an emphasis that had slipped somewhat in recent years with Neymar, Messi and Luis Suarez forming a powerful attack, albeit sometimes at the expense of their ability to dominate possession.

Since the exit of Xavi Hernandez two and a half years ago, and those of Cesc Fabregas and Thiago Alcantara, Barcelona was in danger of seeing its lineage of great midfielder­s broken.

Coutinho showed at Liverpool that he can play anywhere in the midfield: in a more attacking role, as a wide player in a four-man line, or deeper to help start the attack.

That versatilit­y will help ensure him a place in a Barcelona midfield that has a set group of first-choice players in Iniesta on the left, Ivan Rakitic on the right, and Sergio Busquets in a defensive role, but little else.

Coutinho, who has the vision and quick passing skills that Barcelona needs, can also provide goals with his accurate strike from distance. He scored 41 times in 152 Premier League appearance­s for Liverpool, including seven in 14 matches in the first half of this campaign.

With Coutinho set to feature, Barcelona will likely part ways with one or more of midfielder­s Andre Gomes, Arda Turan, Rafinha and Denis Suarez.

Barcelona has also recently seen the return of summer signing Ousmane Dembele from a tendon injury that had sidelined him since September.

Dembele would likely need to play in a 4-3-3 alongside Messi and Suarez, while Coutinho could play on the right side of a midfield line with Iniesta and Busquets.

But Valverde has also gotten good results this year – including a 3-0 victory at Real Madrid last month – with just Messi and Suarez in attack and a fourman midfield including Paulinho, who has given the team goals and added muscle since his arrival.

Coutinho will be limited to playing in the Spanish league, which Barcelona leads, and the Copa del Rey for the remainder of this season since he cannot play for another team in the Champions League. – AP

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