Man Utd fans can blame Casillas if De Gea joins Madrid — Five things we learned from the Champions League last 16

920

The Real Madrid goalkeeper is doing everything he can to ensure he’s replaced in the summer while Jose Mourinho might be cursing an errant piece of transfer business.

As hard as David de Gea is working to make sure Manchester United re-qualifies for the Champions League, Iker Casillas’ continued, yet inexplicable, presence in the Real Madrid goal would appear to be the one big thing liable to hasten the champions’ exit from the competition this season.

Whether or not De Gea ends up back in Madrid this summer, one thing is for certain: Real needs a new goalkeeper and will be lucky to get anywhere close to the final this year with Casillas between the sticks.

Should De Gea move to Santiago Bernabeu, to the benefit no doubt of Jorge Mendes, then Manchester United fans would be entitled to hold Casillas directly responsible. The veteran’s form in the Champions League last 16 second leg against Schalke was a new low for the man for whom the bar drops further by the week. There were all kinds of mistakes in that 4-3 defeat.

It has reached the stage that Carlo Ancelotti is effectively sabotaging his own team’s chances in order to keep some semblance of confidence invested in a player considered one of the great modern goalkeepers. Those days are finished.

Casillas not only drops the ball and allows it to squirm through his body — he no longer sends any message of assurance to the rest of his team. The Real Madrid defense appears desperate to prevent any type of shot hitting his goal.

Contrast that to the confidence instilled in Manchester United by De Gea. He is currently making logic-defying saves game after game as United attempts to earn a spot in the Champions League.

If the Red Devils do reach it, then no one man will have played a larger part than De Gea. Only he will not likely be around to see it.

Chelsea went off like a rocket this season and it looked like Eden Hazard and Cesc Fabregas would carry the Blues to easy glory in the Premier League and propel them far in Europe too. It has not worked out exactly like that. Chelsea is out of the Champions League and recent performances in the league would suggest that its pace is also slowing on the home front.

Jose Mourinho has his favorites, that much is sure, but it would be reasonable to say that the Chelsea coach expects too much from too few players. The team looked leggy Tuesday against Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, but Mourinho only made one change in the home draw against Southampton over the weekend.

He demands that Hazard and Fabregas maintain that electric creative pace with which they began the season. But Hazard needs help — he cannot do it all on his own. Fabregas is burned out.

Mourinho fortified Wolfsburg’s attacking ranks in January with the sale of Andre Schurrle, who could have certainly added brains and energy to the Chelsea front line. It is, however, his decision to sell Kevin De Bruyne to the Germans that could come to define Chelsea’s season.

Chelsea does not have a player as good as De Bruyne this season. He is the best player in Germany, bar none, and would easily command a place in Mourinho’s lineup these days had he been permitted to develop at Stamford Bridge.

Mourinho, though, has little regard for bringing players through, and there were some personal differences between the baby-faced Belgian and his former coach. Whatever those differences were should have been worked through because Chelsea’s Champions League ambitions are dead in the water and De Bruyne could have done something about it.

He has scored nine goals and assisted 16 more in 25 league matches this season. He has created 80 scoring chances. That is 30 more than Arjen Robben. By contrast, his compatriot at Chelsea, Hazard, has scored 10 goals, provided six assists and created 79 chances in the Premier League. He has done that in 28 matches. It is tight, but the edge goes to De Bruyne.

Last week he scored two goals in a 3-1 win over Inter in the Europa League. Over the weekend he scored one more and created another two in the league against Freiburg.

As criticism of Fabregas and, in particular, Oscar mounts up at the Bridge, it is no small wonder that fans are questioning De Bruyne that got away.

PSG better off without Ibra

What has Zlatan Ibrahimovic done so far in 2015 to draw attention to himself and his tiresome “brand”?

He was banned for two matches after delivering a violent kick to Romain Hamouma in a Ligue 1 fixture in January. He was sent off for an ill-conceived tackle on Oscar against Chelsea in the Champions League. Last weekend, he described France as a “shit” country. Zlatan, if it’s that “shit,” then hand back the $14 million per year you’ve been earning since you moved there and leave.

The point is that Ibrahimovic has been no less in the headlines this season, but it is not his football doing the talking. Last season he scored 41 goals. Aside from penalties, he has scored two goals in 2015. None has come in the Champions League. During this season he has only managed two European strikes — meaningless ones against Ajax and Barcelona in the group stage.

He has not laid on one assist in the Champions League and has created only four chances. By contrast, the PSG midfielder Blaise Matuidi has scored one, assisted two and created 13 chances. He is a player of far more consequence but lacks Zlatan’s propaganda.

Even Edinson Cavani, the man generally forced to play out of position to accommodate the Swede, has scored six goals and created six chances.

Zlatan’s dismissal against Chelsea was not actually a hindrance for PSG. Without him demanding the ball in the areas he likes, PSG was liberated to play intricate passing combinations to carry the team upfield and maintain possession. Zlatan does not facilitate that.

Ibrahimovic is now facing bans on the domestic front and in the Champions League. His team, then, has a chance to solidify its credentials for both titles in his absence.

Jose Mourinho and Pep Guardiola demonstrated that the last step a team needed to take win the Champions League was to sell Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

Mind games come back to bite Bayern opponents

A curious subplot to Bayern’s routine aggregate win over Shakhtar Donetsk developed via a leaked WhatsApp conversation following the second leg in Munich.

Bayern’s Brazilian fullback Rafinha, like most people, is involved in a chat group with friends back home. After the German record champions demolished Shakhtar 7-0 at the Allianz Arena, Rafinha shared his thoughts on the Brazilian contingent in the opposition ranks.

“Those guys are disgusting,” he said in a message that subsequently went beyond the party for whom it was intended. “You know what Taison, Fred and Luiz Adriano, another shit, said about our team? They said in an interview that our team was common and that they had chances to win. That’s OK about having chances to win, but a common team?”

Rafinha went on to accuse of Douglas Costa of disrespecting Bastian Schweinsteiger throughout the game before asking for the World Cup winner’s shirt afterward. The midfielder made a cameo appearance in one of Rafinha’s video messages and confirmed just exactly what he thought of Costa’s attempt to bury the hatchet.

The incident serves as a reminder of the unique psychological power Bayern commands these days. On one hand, the opposition players try to agitate them on the field — then go autograph hunting when the game is over.

Werder Bremen general manager Thomas Eichin was harshly treated by Bayern sporting director Matthias Sammer for daring to suggest ahead of the league meeting that referees were favoring the champions. “He was probably hit by a hockey puck in the head,” was Sammer’s assessment before Bayern ultimately won 4-0.

In its past six matches, all wins, Bayern has scored 26 and conceded only two. Pep Guardiola’s team has reached such a level of dominance that the only wars opponents can fight any longer are in the mind. They are losing those too.

Allegri lifts Juve to places Conte could not

You would never think it now, but Massimiliano Allgeri was assumed last summer to be the coach who would preside over Juventus’s demise. Antonio Conte walked out on the eve of the season because of disagreements about where the club’s transfer priorities should lie.

Arturo Vidal and Paul Pogba, the team’s two big stars, were rumored to be on the verge of leaving too. Some modest business was conducted but the signs suggested decline. Roma had added quality and was expected to improve on last year.

Juventus, though, stand 14 points clear of its nearest rival in Serie A and is bound for the Champions League quarterfinals. There is a serenity about the club totally at odds with the sense of chaos that accompanied the start to their season. It is in Europe that its improvements are most notable.

Conte could never seem to get his team playing comfortably on the continent. He was wedded to his 3-5-2 system and did not believe in the merits of a squad, instead fielding as often as possible his preferred XI. Allegri may not have brought with him high expectations, but he has equalled Conte’s best efforts as Juve coach already. In 2012, Juve overcame Celtic to reach this stage. Dortmund is a significantly bigger scalp.

He has added a new dimension to Juve’s play: a tactical dexterity that allows the club to move comfortably from three to four at the back. Juve has conceded only one goal in its last four matches in Europe. He has unleashed Carlos Tevez, a scorer of six goals in the competition this season after six campaigns without one.

Even diehard Juventus fans will admit they are a rung beneath teams like Bayern, Real Madrid and Barcelona — the three favorites for the competition. With the right draw, however, Juve could go a long way.

Source: Goal

2 COMMENTS