The current crop of Madrid players and their coach may not be loved much, but they have come to define the last few seasons of the Champions League.
Zinedine Zidane’s Real Madrid belongs among football’s great teams after winning a 13th European Cup, but the 31 victory against Liverpool may signal the end of an era for the club.
In the annals of football history, it will not matter — the details, the minutiae, even the rippling of the net. Even in the minds of the players and the coaches — the protagonists — it won’t matter. The resplendence of Gareth Bale’s bicycle kick, Loris Karius’ calamitous blunders and Mohamed Salah’s heartbreaking injury — of an epic Champions League final will eventually be of little importance.
In the end, Madrid played with the cockiness its players have shown over the last couple of seasons. In their superiority, they always apply a pleasant brutality and aggression to their game. They were not as dominant in this final as against Juventus last year, but this win was more significant. In Cardiff last year, Madrid shed the tag of ‘Galacticos’ and needed an epithet befitting a new merengue generation whose trademark was not playing thrilling football or honouring the game’s finest virtues but winning.
On the day, Zidane and this Madrid team ascended to the pantheon, like the Ajax Amsterdam of Johan Cruyff and Franz Beckenbauer’s Bayern Munich before them. They are no longer simply great; they already belong to history.
Esta historia es de la edición June 16, 2018 de Sportstar.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición June 16, 2018 de Sportstar.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Tokyo Marathon Cancelled For Amateurs On Coronavirus Fears
Organisers in Japan cancelled the amateur portion of the Tokyo marathon, affecting around 38,000 runners, on fears about the spread of the new coronavirus in Japan.
Right Criteria To Pick The Tennis GOAT
What should the criteria be? What weight should be attached to each criterion? And what should not be considered as valid criteria?
The making of a batting behemoth
If Steve Smith dominated the Ashes in England in a dramatic, blockbuster fashion then his like for like a replacement, Marnus Labuschagne, is the Next Big Thing after an exciting summer of run-glut.
WHEN ACES WERE REWARDED...
It was an evening of nostalgia and celebration when the Sportstar Aces awards were given away in Mumbai.
A question of recognition
After a week of awards, one wonders if it’s only a departed player that one will be named after.
Thinking straight, thinking right!
“A lot depends on when I am bowling and what is required from me. That’s something I do when I play for India and I try to follow the same thing in the domestic circuit,” says Yuzvendra Chahal.
The Big Three and the Next Gen
Though the Big Three are very unlikely to retire during the same year, Judy Murray, mother of Andy, echoed the sentiments of many fans worried about the impact of their departures.
WAKING UP TO MENTAL HEALTH
Sport at large and cricket specifically has taken an inordinately long time to address the elephant in the room — the dark abyss of depression.
Like sunshine in a gloomy dressing room
Bangladesh quick Abu Jayed Rahi is new in the red-ball arena, but his swing brings back old memories — of James Anderson on green tops.
The league of the masses
With traditional clubs locking horns with the hard-working nurseries of the game, the I-League will continue to keep the beating heart of Indian football alive despite official apathy.