Los Angeles Times

The Catalan battle cry: ‘Gooooal’

A soccer match between Barcelona and Madrid gives vent to separatist tensions.

- By Meg Bernhard Bernhard is a special correspond­ent.

MADRID — The Real Madrid soccer fans wore red-and-yellow Spanish flags around their necks like capes, proudly brandishin­g them for photos before streaming into the stadium Saturday for the matchup between the country’s biggest sports rivals.

For some fans of the world-renowned soccer team from Spain’s capital, Saturday’s El Clásico — the name given for any matchup between Real Madrid and Fútbol Club Barcelona — was an opportunit­y to display Spanish pride amid a bitter separatist drive in Catalonia.

The teams faced off at Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu stadium two days after a vote in Catalonia kept its regional government in the hands of pro-independen­ce parties, deepening the country’s constituti­onal crisis and vindicatin­g politician­s who want the prosperous northeaste­rn region to secede from Spain.

“This is a game with a little bit of a political connotatio­n,” said Zaragoza resident and Real Madrid fan Carmen Begué, wearing the red-and-yellow national flag as she walked toward the stadium. “For me, [Real Madrid] is the team that is Spanish, and that is why I am wearing the Spanish flag.”

It’s common for Real Madrid fans to wear the Spanish flag. It now has new meaning, however, as a symbol of Spanish unity.

On the other side, FC Barcelona’s motto, “More than a club,” reflects its status as a pillar of Catalan identity.

When El Clásico is played in Barcelona, home-team fans usually sing at the 17th minute of the match, to commemorat­e the fall of Catalonia in the Spanish War of Secession and celebrate Catalan identity. Some bring the Estelada, a redand-yellow striped flag with a blue triangle used by separatist­s, to the Barcelona stadium.

While Madrid fans hoped for a win Saturday, Barcelona instead came out on top with a 3-0 victory. The loss put Madrid in fourth place in Spain’s soccer league, La Liga.

The two teams are consistent­ly among the top — and richest — in the world. Each has a player who has made a claim to being the best on the planet: Lionel Messi for Barcelona and Cristiano Ronaldo for Madrid. Messi scored one of Barcelona’s three goals Saturday.

The Catalonia independen­ce drive has triggered Spain’s most serious constituti­onal crisis since the end of the dictatorsh­ip of Gen. Francisco Franco, who died in 1975.

A low-turnout Oct. 1 referendum held by the Catalan government and deemed illegal by the central government overwhelmi­ngly favored independen­ce. Weeks later, region leader Carles Puigdemont unilateral­ly declared Catalonia independen­t from Spain, prompting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to dissolve the Catalan parliament and schedule a Dec. 21 election in an effort to quell separatism.

He lost his gamble Thursday, after a record turnout of voters gave the majority of seats in the Catalan parliament to pro-independen­ce parties.

Over the last few months, players and officials from Catalonia’s beloved team Barcelona FC have weighed in on the conflict.

In November, after a Madrid judge ordered former Catalonia Vice President Oriol Junqueras and several other former government ministers to jail while being investigat­ed on treason for their role in the independen­ce referendum, the team released a note “lamenting” the decision.

“Barcelona FC believes actions like these don’t contribute to constructi­ng the means of dialogue and respect we have always defended,” the Nov. 2 note reads.

A defender on the team, Gerard Piqué, has argued for Catalans’ right to vote in a referendum on independen­ce. He voted in the Oct. 1 referendum, but has not indicated whether he favors independen­ce.

The political uncertaint­y in Catalonia also has brought into question whether Barcelona would remain part of the Spanish League if the region becomes independen­t.

FC Barcelona’s president, Josep Maria Bartomeu, has expressed a desire to remain part of La Liga regardless of whether Catalonia separates from Spain. But league President Javier Tebas said it would not be possible to admit a nonSpanish team into the league.

Before entering the stadium Saturday, some Real Madrid fans criticized FC Barcelona for making political statements.

“Madrid has never been a politicize­d team,” said Rodrigo Rodriguez, 34, a Real Madrid supporter. “But Barca is.”

Rodriguez and his friend, Manuel Alvaro, are against Catalan separatism. They brought a Spanish f lag reading “Long Live United Spain” to the game.

Alvaro started carrying the flag at games because of the Catalonia conflict and because “we are stronger together,” he said.

For other fans, though, politics have nothing to do with the country’s most beloved sport.

After the game, Jose Manuel Jimeno walked from the stadium with his 11-year-son, Lucas, both beaming.

The Barcelona fan thought it was a “great game, played very well technicall­y,” but warned against reading anything more into it.

“You have to separate sport and politics,” he said.

Jaime Gonzalez, a Real Madrid fan, agreed. The 21year-old shouted insults degrading FC Barcelona and Catalonia with a group of Real Madrid supporters before the game, but he said it’s just a soccer rivalry — nothing new.

“It’s always been this way,” he said.

 ?? Paul White Associated Press ?? IT’S COMMON for Real Madrid fans to wear the Spanish f lag, but now it carries weight as a symbol of unity.
Paul White Associated Press IT’S COMMON for Real Madrid fans to wear the Spanish f lag, but now it carries weight as a symbol of unity.
 ?? Denis Doyle Getty Images ?? LIONEL MESSI of Barcelona celebrates a goal during the La Liga match Saturday with Real Madrid. “This is a game with a little bit of a political connotatio­n,” said one fan from Zaragoza. Barcelona won, 3-0.
Denis Doyle Getty Images LIONEL MESSI of Barcelona celebrates a goal during the La Liga match Saturday with Real Madrid. “This is a game with a little bit of a political connotatio­n,” said one fan from Zaragoza. Barcelona won, 3-0.

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