"EL MUNDANO DEPORTIVO" : RAFA BENITEZ

As promised here is the the first article from SFS bi-monthly collaboration:
"EL MUNDANO DEPORTIVO" - by Adrian Vogel.
His article talks about LIVERPOOL Spanish Coach
RAFAEL BENITEZ
& some "theories" to his situation at Liverpool & his
possible future.
STRIKER
____________________________________________

Rafa Benitez (by Adrian Vogel for SFS)














Disclaimer
: This post was originally written before Sunday’s Liverpool vs.
Everton game.

Starting an article with a disclaimer is quite unusual. But it had to be
done since –even in the Premier League- results change all theories.
And I suspect that the great Rafa Benitez can be Real Madrid’s new
coach.

My suspicions (and I could be extremely wrong) are based on different
“circumstantial evidences”:

1.
All backs & forts surrounding his Liverpool contract renewal. Yes,
I know that he still has next season to fulfil. So what? How come he
hasn’t renewed yet? I see past, present and (foresee) future problems with
the current owners, who are involved in the Club’s sale accepting a lesser
offer than the original one:Tom Hicks and George Gillett will have to settle
for a profit reduced by $150m (£110m) if they sell Liverpool to Nasser
al-Kharafi, the Kuwaiti billionaire, after their failure to close a deal for
Liverpool last July.

2. There’s a Spanish saying “cuando veas las barbas de tu vecino pelar,
pon las tuyas a remojar” - when you see your neighbour’s beard being
shaved, put yours to soak- and I’m 100% sure that Mr. Benítez has Juande
Ramos in mind when renewing his Liverpool contract. Why? Because he’s
demanding full decision powers. As it has always been the case with
English clubs,"a la Ferguson"(citing the most obvious example) a coach
and a manager hold the same executive position in most Premier League’s
teams. Rafa Benítez knows that Mr. Ramos ousting had to do with
Tottenham’s sale of Keane and Berbatov, without the coach’s approval
(Juande wasn’t the club’s manager). And their replacements where not
players of the same level. Mr. Benítez is fully aware that if the club is not
sold key players will be. Therefore he demands full voice and vote in all
transfers.

3. All signs show that our hero is stressed. The future of the club’s ownership
– and it’s been reported that his relationship with the current American
owners has never been a “hunky dory” situation - may be a cause. His renal
surgeries don’t help either. His wife’s refusal to move to Juventus could
well be another added factor. The “verbal confrontation” with Sir Ferguson
is a symptom. Plus having Manchester United co-sharing the League’s
leadership and the Championship’s confrontation versus “his” Real Madrid
are of no help either.

Few know that Rafa’s first team as a player was at Real Madrid’s
“academy”. He mixed his university studies with his football career with
lower division Spanish teams but injury caused him to prematurely retire.
His coaching debut was also at Real Madrid: he joined the coaching staff
at the age of 26, going on to work as the under 19 and reserve teams
coach, and as assistant manager for the senior team (under Vicente Del
Bosque). But few are aware of the fact that he and Grande (Del Bosque’s
# 2 since Benítez departure) where Raúl’s first coaches at “the White House”.
Raúl scored 71 goals in 33 games with Castilla (Real Madrid B) under
Benítez, which propelled him to the first team (coached by Valdano). In
total Raúl achieved 83 goals in 180 games in all under categories before
establishing himself as a fixture in the senior team. Meanwhile our man in
Liverpool worked at the club for 6 seasons (1993-1999) in the youth teams
(4 Leagues and 2 Cups), Castilla and Real Madrid (as Del Bosque’s
assistant in his first tenure as Real Madrid’s coach).
























With the current turmoil that has led to Ramón Calderon’s dismissal
and expected Presidential elections before the summer, a couple of names
are fixtures in all conversations: Florentino Pérez and Rafa Benítez.
Both formerly associated to the Best Club of the XX Century. Mr. Pérez
is remembered as the “galactic” President. But also as the man who
ruled the Club for three “losing” years, whose flight left us in the current
institutional dire straits.

Rumours fly. And if Florentino finally decides to run in the upcoming
elections all polls show him as the sure winner. His candidacy is associated
to two coaches: Arsene Wegner and Rafa Benítez.

The current Arsenal boss is an old Pérez dream. But the Frenchman has
never showed any appreciation for Real Madrid. In my opinion Benítez
should be the man. The right choice to command the post Raúl situation.
He was his first coach at the club and could be the last (if the circumstances
are right). Wegner isn’t a Champions winner. And “our” Rafa is, coaching
Liverpool. His “second coming” could close the virtuous circle.

I’ve left for the closing paragraph a reminder (and I started with a
disclaimer): it’s a well known “secret” that among Florentino’s initial
desires, during his first mandate, were to transfer Raúl and Casillas. With
RB’s arrival he could now satisfy his first wish (plus Benítez and Raul
don’t share reps; Juande and the superstar player do).
_______________________________________________________

Adrian Vogel has his own Blog "El Mundano" written in Spanish which
covers everything from Sports, Politics, Music...to local Culture.

5 comments:

RedsMan said...

Hey, Striker.

Very interesting points. But Benitez has felt the atmosphere and determination of the fans to know he is somewhere where football is passionate. Very passionate, and built up on a hierarchy of history and guile to be one of the best teams ever in England.

This is also interesting considering the rumours previously of Real Madrid wanting him before Juande was chosen, and both Liverpool and Madrid meet shortly in the Champions League. I think he will stay and being bias I definitely hope he will stay.

We (LFC) are being ridiculed by Man Utd fans (those who love to act moronic and show off and gloat and show their 'plastic' support that either goes up when Man Utd are winning and is non-existent even when Man Utd draw, much less lose). Many say we will never win the league with Rafa, while I have implored we will.

I can recognise it, the LFC fans can recognise it, and Real Madrid have done too. The only ones who cannot see Rafa's potential are those who are easily bought with money to print contradicting and persuasive points of view (not those of their own) or those who follow football and can only see neon lights of Man Utd as they are the current best team.

They cannot see the detail of the bigger picture as their mind focuses on the miniscule of things (Man Utd win everything, beat everyone, and nothing else matters). They said we will never beat Man Utd, and Rafa did in September. Now they are saying he will never win the league, and yet we can 2nd with a game less and goals difference of 2 less than them, and yet to play them. We are very close to completing objective no.2.

I wonder what they will say then? 'You've won the league the once with Rafa, so what? We've won it several times.' Always something to say, always an excuse to cover for not getting it right previously, always something to say to back themselves out of a situation when they have been disproven. all the while, they will not recognise Rafa's potential. Their loss. Our gain.

Hopefully not Real Madrid's for years to come.


RedsMan.

Anonymous said...

Hi Redsmen,
I will send this to Adrian Vogel.
Best

Anonymous said...

Hi RedsMan,

You've introduced an excellent point in this debate: the emotional factor. For what I know Rafa Benítez has strong attachments to Liverpool's supporters. And these emotional links could be key for him to stay. If all other matters are settled (which I doubt). For example he never had that support during his Valencia tenure (where he won 2 Ligas -and if my memory doesn´t fail me thay've won 4 in total- and 1 UEFA Cup).

What's left to know is if the current and future owners love the club as much as you all do. And I include Rafa benítez in "all".

T said...

Very enjoyable read - thanks Mr Vogel. Great style and very interesting opinions!

Great signing to your site, Striker!

Benitez loves the fans at Liverpool - for me this is noticeable in that he mentions them at every opportunity with the warmth and solidarity that he knows they are with him. But he also clearly has issues with the board and the current chief executive.

We'll indeed wait and see what happens in the summer...

Anonymous said...

Thank you Mr. T! Your compliments are encouraging.

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