
Looking for a match that won’t bore the living daylights out of you? Fancy some enterprising and expansive football? Is an obstinately boisterous crowd support your cup of tea? Then El Clasico is for you.
Fair to say that whenever arch rivals Real Madrid and Barcelona share the same pitch, the stakes are incredibly high and losing is just not an option.
Real Madrid are in a rut
By the time the referee blew the final whistle at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium in Real Madrid’s last home fixture against Levante, the home side’s poor run of form in La Liga alone had stretched to three defeats and one draw in four matches, having just managed a solitary goal and shipping six in return. It never rains but it pours, huh?
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Jose Luis Morales of Levante celebrates with team mates after scoring his sides first goal during the La Liga match between Real Madrid CF and Levante UD at Estadio Santiago Bernabeu on October 20, 2018 in Madrid, Spain. Photo: Getty[/caption]
Real Madrid are in a rut but it would be unfair to say that all of it is down to head coach Julen Lopetegui’s tactics.
It isn’t Lopetegui’s fault that injuries came at precisely the wrong moment and to players who are pivotal to his tactical scheme. Marcelo Vieira and Dani Carvajal’s absence reduced width and unpredictability in attack and Isco’s creative spark was missing.
It isn’t Lopetegui’s fault that he has a tiring Luka Modric in his side, who still seems to be struggling after an intense World Cup campaign with Croatia.
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Real Madrid's Croatian midfielder Luka Modric controls the ball during the UEFA Champions League group G football match between Real Madrid CF and FC Viktoria Plzen at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid on October 23, 2018. Photo: AFP[/caption]
It isn’t Lopetegui’s fault that Real Madrid’s top brass was more keen on building a retractable roof at the Bernabeu worth €575 million (imagine what that sort of money could buy you in the transfer market) rather than finding an adequate replacement for Real Madrid’s greatest player ever, Cristiano Ronaldo.
Not replacing Ronaldo with a big name signing was a copious miscalculation. Real Madrid flirted with Kylian Mbappe, winked at Neymar, spurred Harry Kane and already have a massively talented fanboy in Eden Hazard, but nothing materialised. An unexceptional Mariano Diaz, struggling Karim Benzema and an injury-prone Gareth Bale never should have been the solution.
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Gareth Bale, Karim Benzema during the match between Athletic Club against Real Madrid at San Mames Stadium in Bilbao, Spain on September 15, 2018. Photo: Getty[/caption]
Interestingly, if expected points are taken into account in La Liga this season so far, Real Madrid would have been on top of the table. While you may argue that it’s the results that matter but having said that, it gives a fair reflection of the fact that all is not wrong at Real Madrid.
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Photo: UnderStat[/caption]
Where has Lopetegui faltered?
But Lopetegui needs to take the blame for certain things as well. The philosophy behind his on-field tactics is an admirable one but there are chinks in his armour.
His rat-a-tat passing style has garnered lots of possession and created loads of chances, but the below par finishing from forwards and lack of defined attacking patterns for the sake of fluidity is not helping his cause.
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Julen Lopetegui Manager of Real Madrid reacts during the Group G match of the UEFA Champions League between Real Madrid and Viktoria Plzen at Bernabeu on October 23, 2018 in Madrid, Spain. Photo: Getty[/caption]
Against teams who sit back and defend, Lopetegui has generally been found wanting with his predictable offensive tactics as his side fails to break down the low blocks, which is particularly worrying as this is a recurring theme adopted by sides playing against Real Madrid.
The lack of playing time for young starlets such as Vinicius Junior and over reliance on underfiring Benzema is questionable. Also, there is a degree of reluctance towards shifting to a different line of attack – try Isco, Marco Asensio as false nine, maybe?
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Vinicius Junior of Real Madrid CF (R) being followed by Victor Laguardia of Deportivo Alaves (L) during the La Liga match between Deportivo Alaves and Real Madrid CF at Estadio de Mendizorroza on October 6, 2018 in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain. Photo: Getty[/caption]
Additionally, the defensive miscues which were obvious during the pre-season have grown to become a consistent problem thus far. The team is susceptible to counter attacks due to lack of cohesive pressing and counter-pressing at times, while some of them have been down to individual errors, like those made by Raphael Varane against Levante.
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(FromL) Real Madrid's Spanish midfielder Isco, Levante's Spanish defender Sergio Postigo and Real Madrid's French defender Raphael Varane jump for the ball during the Spanish league football match Real Madrid CF against Levante UD at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid on October 20, 2018. Photo: AFP[/caption]
Let’s jump to the other side of the picture
A few weeks back, Lionel Messi after Barcelona’s draw against Athletic at Camp Nou said:
“This is Barca. We have enough players to not depend on one.”Now with Messi watching the match from the stands due to an injured arm, his teammates must show exactly that. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"]



