The National - News

ANCELOTTI IN TOUCHING DISTANCE OF EUROPEAN GRAND SLAM

▶ Manager has won all other major leagues across continent and will have full set if Real Madrid clinch La Liga

- IAN HAWKEY

In his final match as head coach of Everton, 11 months ago, Carlo Ancelotti went to the Etihad Stadium to play the English champions. Within 14 minutes, his team were trailing 2-0, Riyad Mahrez having set up a Kevin de Bruyne goal while some spectators were still taking their seats, and Gabriel Jesus, with an elegant turn away from his marker, taking advantage of a De Bruyne pass.

On his next visit to the same stadium last Tuesday, Ancelotti experience­d an alarming deja-vu. The defence he is now in charge of organising allowed Mahrez to cross for De Bruyne to score, and, soon afterwards, Gabriel to spin away from a marker and make good on a De Bruyne pass. Manchester City had a 2-0 lead within 12 minutes this time, against Ancelotti’s Real Madrid in a Champions League semi-final first leg.

Only the other day, Ancelotti was explaining, without making it sound like a boast, that in his long career in management he seldom makes the same mistake twice in quick succession. After a quarter of a century in the job, and a warehouse full of trophies, he can say that with authority.

Conceding two sets of replica goals to City within less than a year looks like an oversight, except that what happened next was very different. Everton lost the last match of their single season under Ancelotti 5-0 (and finished in the top half of the Premier League, a good deal better off than Everton are now).

Ancelotti’s Madrid finished up 4-3 losers at City and kept alive their chances of making it into a European Cup final after next Wednesday’s second leg.

On Saturday, Madrid can boost their confidence by claiming the point they need to confirm, with four games to spare, the Spanish Liga title. They are at home to Espanyol. Ancelotti will rest some senior players from the starting XI and still expect his less-used squad members to help deliver the right result at the Bernabeu.

The significan­ce of the title for the manager will be immense. Winning La Liga, the major trophy that eluded Ancelotti in a previous, European Cup-winning, Copa del Rey-lifting two-year spell at Madrid from 2013, will give ‘Carletto’ a unique grand slam of leagues.

He has already tasted succesin Serie A as manager of AC Milan in 2004, in the Premier League with Chelsea in 2010, with the Ligue 1 crown at PSG in 2013 and in the Bundesliga with Bayern Munich five years ago.

With La Liga, those are the five strongest domestic competitio­ns in the world. An understate­d 62-year-old Italian is close to conquering them all.

He was genuinely surprised last summer to be asked back to Madrid, sincere in telling Everton he would not have walked away from Goodison Park for any other offer.

He had not been lobbying for a job that, once Zinedine Zidane stepped down having fallen short in a gripping title race against Atletico Madrid, Real were minded to fill with a younger coach. “The decision came from Madrid,” explained Ancelotti this week. “They had confidence in what I could do and I’m enjoying it.”

He did not enjoy losing 4-0 at home to Barcelona last month, although the gap in the table by then was large enough that Madrid were still firm favourites for La Liga.

He did not delight in City going 2-0 up so early in Tuesday’s riveting contest, an evening when some of the complicati­ons of the Madrid squad Ancelotti inherited were apparent. When he came back to the Bernabeu, after six years away, two of the pillars of the team were leaving – Raphael Varane to Manchester United and Sergio Ramos to PSG.

Ancelotti’s work with a newlook central defence has been one of his achievemen­ts, and the moments when madridista­s have longed for the authority of Ramos and Varane very few. But at the Etihad, the flaws in the performanc­es of Eder Militao and David Alaba in defence did provoke some longing for Ramos and Varane.

Appreciati­on for Ancelotti’s coaching would start at the front of the team. Vinicius Junior’s improvemen­t as a finisher has been startling over the past eight months. Karim Benzema, 34, has never looked a more complete centre-forward. He scored his 40th and 41st goals of the season at City in midweek. “We’re lucky to have him,” says Ancelotti.

Madrid may also be deemed lucky that Barcelona have been at a low ebb for much of the past year, and that Atletico turned unusually loose and inconsiste­nt in their defence of the title.

But Ancelotti is tired of hearing what he calls “so many people saying ‘but’ while we are top of the league”.

He will enjoy confirmati­on of his grand slam of titles when it comes, knowing that very quickly judgment will be reserved for what happens in the second leg against City.

The Italian tasted Serie A success in 2004, won the Premier League in 2010, Ligue 1 in 2013 and the Bundesliga in 2017

 ?? EPA ?? Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti with Karim Benzema after the Champions League semi-final first leg against Manchester City
EPA Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti with Karim Benzema after the Champions League semi-final first leg against Manchester City

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