
According to Real Madrid forward Raul Gonzalez, the recent resignation of the club’s president, Ramon Calderon, has assisted in damaging the club’s image. He states:
“There are situations that one cannot control. The most damaged things are the image and the history of the club. It is clear that we are not happy and the club has to present another image to the outside world.”
This isn’t the whole quote so go over to Goal.com and read the entire article. But my personal opinion is that while Calderon’s quitting certainly sucks, it hasn’t had any effect on Real Madrid’s image. Had he stuck around, their image would still be tarnished.
Real Madrid has been plagued with injuries since the before the season began and Wesley Sneijder got hurt in the Emirates Cup. Injuries have shifted Arjen Robben, Sergio Ramos and Raul himself in and out of match play and have also put Ruud van Nistelrooy and Mamadou Diarra (two of the team’s linchpins) out for the whole season. None of these are nickel-and-dime losses.
To deal with these losses, Real Madrid have brought new players into the mix, including their palace coup of plucking Klaas-Jan Huntelaar from Ajax. They’ve also brought in ex-Tottenham Hotspur boss Juande Ramos in the hopes he’ll lead the team back to the top of the La Liga table. Factor these recent additions in with their preseason signing of Rafael van der Vaart, and it appears, from a birds-eye view, that their issues are on their way to being repaired.
But something I’ve learned about football this season is that any new club additions need time to acclimate to the team system before they start yielding the dividends (instances such as Fernando Torres yielding dividends his first day at Liverpool are rare). Yes, the Real veteran players are doing well along side Juande Ramos, Huntelaar and van der Vaart. But they committed a sloppy loss against Barcelona and are getting low-scoring 1-0 wins, as always. Change may have to come to America, but it has yet to reach the Santiago Bernabéu stadium.
Still, some positive results have come from Real Madrid’s moves. They currently hold the No. 2 spot in La Liga, which is tough to do in one of the world’s most competitive football leagues. They also seem to be on the comeback trail from of all their losses with five consecutive wins as of this post. Sneijder, Raul, Robben and Sergio Ramos are healthy, van der Vaart is finding his role, and both Huntelaar and Juande Ramos are settling in.
All this being said, FC Barcelona is No. 1 and holds that lead by 12 points. For them to lose the lead requires that they go on a four-week string of losses and/or draws as Real goes concurrent string of wins, and that’s a doubtful chain of events. And as healthy as all those Real Madrid guys are, Lionel Messi, Samuel Eto’o, Thierry Henry over at Barca are REALLY healthy and are practically scoring in their sleep. The general consensus among many in the football community is that Barcelona has the league title sewn up, so much so that four-and-a-half months before the season even ends, bookies are already making payouts to those that bet on them winning the whole season.
This isn’t the end of the world for RM. Teams from all levels of sports have bad years, and dynasties such as the Jordan-era Bulls or the Brady-era Patriots are not frequent occurrences. But for the past decade, Real Madrid have been a footie powerhouse, taking in three La Liga and three Champions League trophies. They’ve been able to easily snag the best of the best players for their squad, including Zinedene Zidane and Ronaldo. Now it appears that the La Liga championship is out of their reach, that they’ll nail down the second 09/10 Champions League spot at best and both Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaka dismissed them when they tried to acquire them (not so much Ronaldo).
With their rushed signings yet to play out in full, the injuries and having to deal with an ostensibly unstoppable Barcelona, Real Madrid simply isn’t the dominate Spanish club that it’s been for the past two years. They are smack dab in-the-middle of a fall from grace and I think that is what’s hurting their image. More so than Calderon quitting.
Is this the end of Real Madrid? Good Lord, no. This is just Barcelona’s year and not Real Madrid’s, and it’s been the other way for a while now. Things are different now for RM and it may be like that for another year or two if Barca keeps up at their current rate. Welcome to football.