The reality is what was seen on the pitch," Carlo Ancelotti said, and what was seen on the pitch wasn't good. In fact, it was awful. So bad that fans of the club who have made miracles their thing left early, whistling as they went. The only surprise was that they didn't whip out the white hankies. Real Madrid were 3-1 down to Milan, who had won once away from San Siro all season, and defeat was as inevitable as it was deserved. Repeated too: in 11 days here Ancelotti's team had lost as many times as in the whole of last season anywhere.
First Barcelona came to the Santiago Bernabéu and scored four, now Milan had got three. Madrid hadn't conceded so many back-to-back at home for 15 years - and the shock was that it had happened so recently. Nor was it just that they had been beaten, it was how they had been beaten: there was an indolence that irritated supporters, a weakness, disorientation and individualism that made Milan's job almost shockingly easy. Madrid hadn't shown up, a bit like for the Ballon d'Or. You might be tempted to call it a system failure, only there was no sign of a system, and after the luxury of 10 days to prepare.
"There's no excuse," Andriy Lunin said. At the beginning of his post-match interview, about as much as the Ukrainian keeper could manage was to sigh: "Pffff..." And even the greeting stuck in his throat. "I can't say 'good evening'," he said. But for him, it would have been more than three, which was bad enough.
"We have to be worried," Ancelotti admitted. "We're lacking something." Something? Right now, Madrid were - are - lacking almost everything. Thibaut Courtois and Dani Carvajal, for a start. But although injured absentees are important, although the line between success and failure is often fine and Madrid have a happy habit of falling on the right side of it, they do not explain this, still less justify it.
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin November 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin November 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
'I constantly just think what if I didn't get Covid?'
Olympic 100m champion Noah Lyles on the Paris ups and downs that earneda key rolein thenewseries of Sprint
'adultification' Watchdog calls for of black children by police to end
The police watchdog for England and Wales has called for urgent measures to stop the \"adultification\" of black children by officers, but campaigners have said the revised guidelines do not go far enough.
Plan to halt arms aid
Donald Trump's plan to tap the retired US Lieutenant General Keith Kellogg as US envoy to Ukraine and Russia has triggered renewed interest in a policy document he co-authored that proposes ending the war by withdrawing weapons from Ukraine if it does not enter peace talks - and giving even more weapons to Ukraine if Russia does not do the same.
Liverpool fear loss of Konaté and Bradley for City clash
Liverpool could be without the defenders Ibrahima Konaté and Conor Bradley when Manchester City visit on Sunday, with Arne Slot admitting the early signs on the injuries they sustained against Real Madrid are not good.
'Worst experience of my life' Swiatek's positive test leads to one-month ban from tennis
Iga Swiatek, the women's tennis world No 2, has received a one-month ban after testing positive for the banned substance trimetazidine (TMZ) in August.
Hummels ruins Spurs' night with late leveller to delight Ranieri
Tottenham could have no complaints about dropping more points in the Europa League.
Nkunku and Mudryk keep Chelsea flying
Chelsea moved to within one win of the Conference League last 16 with victory in Heidenheim to maintain their perfect start in the competition.
Højlund doubles up to secure Amorim's maiden win after first-half scare
Ruben Amorim received a rapturous welcome from the Old Trafford congregation, then oversaw a helter-skelter victory in his first home as Manchester United's sixth No 1 of the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era.
Moshiri pledge over £451m loan if Everton sale drags on
Farhad Moshiri has agreed to convert his £451m loan to Everton into shares if the club have not been sold by the time new Premier League regulations on shareholder loans come into force.
Lampard out to prove critics wrong with Coventry return
Former Chelsea manager was 'outstanding candidate' says club's chairman