Real Madrid aren’t in ‘crisis’ despite slump in form
6:02 am | October 3, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
8:52 AM ET
The sky is falling. Real Madrid have two defeats and one draw in their last three games. They have gone 329 minutes without scoring; if you frame it as being more than five hours (which it is), the run sounds even worse. The last time they went this long before celebrating a goal was in 2007, when Fabio Capello was in charge and David Beckham had yet to move to Los Angeles.
Furthermore, Real failed to score in a Champions League game for the first time in nearly two years, a run of 29 games, and they enabled the opposing goalkeeper, Igor Akinfeev, to keep a clean sheet for only the second time in his last 12 years of Champions League appearances.
After his bright start to the season, Karim Benzema is regressing to what he is, a non-scoring center-forward. Luka Modric looks exhausted and drained, kinda like a 33-year-old who put his body through the ultimate emotional and physical strain in the summer and is now sweating on both a new contract (his deal expires in 2020, hence the summer links to Inter) and, until Wednesday morning, a possible charge for perjury. Julen Lopetegui is on the proverbial hot seat and lacks both the gravitas and stone-faced icon status of his predecessor, Zinedine Zidane. (While we’re at it, the last guy to replace a Champions League winning manager at Real Madrid, Rafa Benitez, got bounced out of the job halfway through the season).
That’s the Chicken Little scenario after Tuesday’s 1-0 defeat at CSKA Moscow. And sure, the headline “CRISIS” was all over the Madrid press. But let’s take a step back, shall we?