Athletic Bilbao Maintains Perfect Start and Basque Heritage

by Andy Pineda on September 21, 2009 · 0 comments

Athletic Bilbao

Pic­tures of famous Ath­letic Bil­bao play­ers at San Mamés. Photo cour­tesy of Nicholas McGowan.

Ath­letic Bil­bao would have no prob­lems with the pro­posed UEFA plan of man­dat­ing eight home­grown play­ers in the squad of eigh­teen for every match or the the­o­ret­i­cal 6 + 5 rule, where six play­ers of the start­ing eleven would have to be eli­gi­ble for the national team of their club’s coun­try.  Ath­letic Bil­bao refuses to sign any­one not of Basque her­itage.  This pol­icy seems out of touch with mod­ern times, as top Euro­pean teams and min­nows of UEFA try to sign the best play­ers within their means, regard­less of coun­try or province of ori­gin.  As their record of accom­plish­ment indi­cates of always stay­ing in the top flight of Span­ish foot­ball, Bil­bao is doing some­thing right.  In the past four years, how­ever, Bil­bao fin­ished in the bot­tom half of the table, includ­ing a last gasp win in the final round of the 2006–2007 sea­son to stave off relegation.

For­sak­ing the can­tera plan never entered the minds of the Bil­bao board­room.  These local play­ers from the Basque gelled together in the past few years, tak­ing the best shots from La Liga and many times plum­met­ing onto the can­vas.  Under the lead­er­ship of man­ager Joaquín Caparrós, Ath­letic Bil­bao is now in a posi­tion to fin­ish in the top half of the table and com­pete for Euro­pean places.

Because of their amaz­ing Copa del Rey cup run to the finals, Bil­bao earned a spot in the Europa League.  After nar­row escapes against Swiss team Young Boys in the third qual­i­fy­ing round and Nor­we­gian out­fit Tromsø in the play­off round, they com­menced their voy­age in the Europa League group stage with a 3–0 thrash­ing of Aus­tria Wien.  In La Liga, Ath­letic won their first two matches, nar­rowly defeat­ing Espanyol at San Mamés 1–0 and dis­patch­ing new­com­ers Xerez 0–1 at Chapín.  Bilbao’s first real test came Sun­day against a Vil­lar­real team who was search­ing for their first win in La Liga after two 1–1 draws with Osasuna and Mallorca.

Both Ath­letic Bil­bao and Vil­lar­real played in the Europa League on Thurs­day, so they were on equal foot­ing when it came to a quick turn­around.  Vil­lar­real was used to cop­ing with mid­week Euro­pean matches along with their Span­ish league respon­si­bil­i­ties since they played in Euro­pean com­pe­ti­tions for the past six sea­sons.  It was Ath­letic, though, who looked like the fresher of the two teams from the out­set.  Villarreal’s intri­cate pass­ing and pos­ses­sion foot­ball were over­matched by Bilbao’s more phys­i­cal and direct style of play.  Being that Bilbao’s roots derived from immi­grant Eng­lish steel and ship­yard work­ers, Bilbao’s phys­i­cal style and use of whip­ping deep crosses and a strong, tough tar­get man should be of no surprise.

Bil­bao cre­ated most of the first half chances, and they con­verted on two of these oppor­tu­ni­ties, giv­ing them a 2–0 lead at half­time.  Vil­lar­real did not have an attempted shot until the 36th minute, and by the end of the half, the Yel­low Sub­ma­rine had two shots total with none of them on goal.  Cen­tral defend­ers Diego Godín and Iván Mar­cano could not han­dle the brute strength and the tech­ni­cal skill of Bil­bao tal­is­man Fer­nando Llorente; Gaizka Toquero and David López ran ram­pant on the wings in sup­port of Llorente; and Igor Gabilondo’s wicked crosses and free kicks cre­ated oppor­tu­ni­ties for his team­mates and kept the Vil­lar­real full­backs in defense rather than mak­ing over­lap­ping runs in the attack.

Vil­lar­real man­ager Ernesto Valverde made a con­scious deci­sion to become more direct in the sec­ond half to counter Bilbao’s dom­i­nance.  This strat­egy paid off in the 49th minute when Cani scored to cut the deficit in half.  Joan Capdevila’s cross trav­eled deep into the penalty area, where Joseba Llorente headed the ball into Cani’s path, and Cani smashed it home from twelve yards out.  Despite this devel­op­ment, Bil­bao was unfazed and even­tu­ally regained their two-goal advan­tage when Javi Martínez headed in the third goal from a Gabilondo cor­ner in the 59th minute.  Ath­letic even­tu­ally won the match 3–2 and kept their 100% record.

Only La Liga giants Barcelona and Real Madrid share a per­fect three for three record with Bil­bao, and while no one claims that Bil­bao will keep pace with them for the remain­der of the sea­son, the swag­ger is back with this Bil­bao team.  Iker Muni­ain and Isaac Aketxe, both 16 years old, made sub­sti­tute appear­ances, 21 year old Javi Martínez scored a goal, 24 year old cen­tral defender Fer­nando Amore­bi­eta effec­tively phased out Giuseppe Rossi and Joseba Llorente for the most part, and 24 year old Fer­nando Llorente showed the form that made him a strong can­di­date for inclu­sion into the Span­ish national team for the 2010 World Cup.

Joaquín Caparrós con­structed a team that stayed true to their ori­gins with their direct play while incor­po­rat­ing the highly tech­ni­cal foot­ball nec­es­sary to com­pete suc­cess­fully in La Liga.  Even if Ath­letic were rel­e­gated for the first time in their his­tory, their sup­port­ers would not want Ath­letic to renounce its can­tera pol­icy and sell out for some extra wins.  The Basques want their club to be rep­re­sented by their own, and the young tal­ent that Caparrós brought into the fold promises a bud­ding future for Los Leones.  While the eco­nomic inequities between Real Madrid and Barcelona and the rest of La Liga may pre­vent Ath­letic Bil­bao from con­sis­tently chal­leng­ing for titles as they did in the 1980’s, the Euskaldunak have a team of which they can be proud not just for their her­itage but also for their football.

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Ath­letic Bil­bao Main­tains Per­fect Start and Basque Her­itage, 5.0 out of 5 based on 2 ratings

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