| Balance of Power Swings Spain's Way |
| Written by Jonathan Fadugba |
| Thursday, 10 September 2009 21:30 |
Cristiano Ronaldo’s transfer from Manchester United to Real Madrid is a landmark transfer in many ways. Financially speaking, at a credit crunch-busting £80 million it is the most expensive transfer in world football history. In terms of precedent it is huge. As one of the biggest clubs in football it is almost unheard for a player at the top of his game to want to leave Old Trafford, let alone for Sir Alex Ferguson to allow it. But Ronaldo’s move to the Bernabeu is also ground-breaking in another sense. It is hugely important in terms of what it represents for world football because it symbolises a new era, a seismic shift. In terms of worldwide glamour and appeal it represents the passing of the baton from England to Spain. Viewers of Sky Sports in England will be familiar with the ever slick Richard Keys, frontman for the network’s Premier League coverage, and the way in which he perpetually, endlessly drums into our head that we are bearing witness to ‘the best league in the world.’ And, all credit to him, he does a good job. Few would previously have disagreed, particularly in recent years. The last five Champions League finals have all involved at least one English club - you have to go as far back as AS Monaco vs FC Porto in 2004 for a final that didn’t - and for the last three years, three out of the four Champions League semi-finalists have also been Premier League clubs. Such statistics no doubt have UEFA President Michel Platini waking up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat. But, in light of the Ronaldo transfer, can Mr. Keys really look through the camera at us in 2009/2010 and proclaim such bold statements about the all-conquering might of English football? And if he does will you believe him? Spanish football’s standing in the global game did not suddenly begin to soar the moment the ink dried on Cristiano Ronaldo’s lucrative 9 million euro a season contract though, as much as Florentino Perez would like you to believe. Spanish football has always possessed an appealing magnetism and allure. No, La Liga’s upward trajectory to becoming arguably the most attractive league in the world game can more likely be traced back to Spain’s triumph at EURO 2008. The international and domestic game received a huge shot in the arm from Spain’s success in Austria and Switzerland, and that feel-good factor filtered through to the domestic leagues, producing a hugely entertaining season at both ends of the La Liga spectrum. FC Barcelona’s unprecedented treble, Champions League included, only added to the increasing prestige of the Spanish game. This was, after all, a team playing some of the most breathtakingly attractive football seen anywhere over arguably the last 20 years. Barcelona became the team to watch in the league to watch. Spain currently boasts the European champions both internationally and at club level. Barcelona’s unprecedented success in 2008/2009 then brought about an unforeseen but important chain reaction. It forced Real Madrid, ranked by Forbes Magazine as the second most valuable club in world football and Barcelona’s fierce rivals, into a corner. They say for every action there’s a reaction: well Real Madrid’s reaction was an incredible £220 million spending spree aimed at bringing in the finest players in the world to ensure that they and not Barcelona would be the most successful and most talked about. Madrid’s dramatic summer of cash splashing certainly grabbed the headlines. It became the talking point in football during a period in which attention should have been reserved for admiring the majestic beauty of Barcelona’s football over the 08/09 season. "We have to do in one year what we would normally do in three" declared Perez. He was not joking. Spain’s La Liga now possesses in its ranks the current World Player of the Year, the previous World Player of the Year and, most likely, the next World Player of the Year. And in Kaka, Ronaldo, Messi, Xavi, Andres Iniesta, Karim Benzema and Zlatan Ibrahimovic et al the rivalry between Real Madrid and FC Barcelona is now not only an intense, heated, politically-charged battle between Spain’s royal institution and the autonomous rebel region of Catalunya (as if that wasn’t reason enough to get excited), but also a coming together of the finest football players anywhere in world football today. An aesthetic treat. A football purist’s wet dream. THE game of next season. English decline
Jonathan Fadugba is publisher and editor-in-chief of Just-Football.com, a site that offers you analytical insight into world football the game, the culture, the spectacle, the passion. |