Atlético Madrid Hits Rock Bottom

by Andy Pineda on October 26, 2009 · 0 comments

Rojiblancos Atlético Madrid Hits Rock BottomHal­loween will arrive in a few days, but for Atlético Madrid, this sea­son has been a com­plete night­mare from the begin­ning.  Los roji­blan­cos hit their low point with a dull thud on Sat­ur­day when they could not fend off a nine-man Mal­lorca team and set­tled for a 1–1 draw at the Vicente Calderón.  Even though Abel Resino received a vote of con­fi­dence from the Atleti board­room ear­lier in the sea­son, those kinds of assur­ances were fleet­ing at best, and when Atlético deliv­ered an impo­tent per­for­mance in the 4–0 thrash­ing at the hands of Chelsea in the UEFA Cham­pi­ons League, the writ­ing was clearly on the wall for the for­mer Atlético goalkeeper.

More often than not, a mid-season coach­ing change leads to a tem­po­rary spike in results.  Recent exam­ples include Espanyol when Mauri­cio Pochet­tino replaced José Manuel Esnal, Real Madrid when Juande Ramos replaced Bernd Schus­ter, and Abel Resino him­self when he replaced Javier Aguirre in the mid­dle of the last cam­paign.  The jury is still out on the new Quique Sánchez Flo­res era, but from the show­ing Atlético Madrid dis­played against Mal­lorca, Sánchez Flo­res has plenty of work to inspire these dispir­ited players.

Tem­po­rary man­ager Santi Denia had very lit­tle time to pre­pare this team after the sack­ing of Abel Resino, but he made a cou­ple of adjust­ments to the start­ing eleven by pre­fer­ring Raúl Gar­cía over Cléber San­tana in the cen­ter of mid­field as well as start­ing eigh­teen year old David de Gea in goal instead of the num­ber one Ser­gio Asenjo.  That change did not mat­ter much in the early parts of the match as de Gea had lit­tle to do.  For the first twenty-five min­utes, the atmos­phere on and off the pitch was very muted.  Anx­ious­ness per­me­ated the Vicente Calderón as the uncer­tainty of the future for Atlético made the sup­port­ers and the play­ers uneasy and unen­thu­si­as­tic.  Then the break Atlético Madrid des­per­ately needed fell right into their laps.

Mal­lorca right back Josemi, try­ing to pre­vent a Simão pass from reach­ing Diego For­lán, struck the ball with his bicep inside the box, and ref­eree César Muñiz Fer­nán­dez imme­di­ately pointed to the penalty spot.  Hav­ing already received a yel­low card ear­lier in the match, Muñiz Fer­nán­dez awarded Josemi a sec­ond yel­low card for the inci­dent, and Mal­lorca was down to ten men.  For­lán stepped to the mark, and…

Diego Forlanit went wide of the post.  This omi­nous occur­rence only helped in pro­long­ing the grow­ing despair.  With a 0–0 score line at the end of the half, the vocif­er­ous whis­tles rained down on their beloved Atlético, and Mal­lorca could not have writ­ten a bet­ter script after the unfor­tu­nate ejec­tion of Josemi.

If Atlético Madrid did not want to take advan­tage of a for­tu­itous break, Mal­lorca gave them a sec­ond chance when Iván Ramis received a sec­ond yel­low card for another hand­ball inside the penalty area.  The ball seemed to play the arm rather than vice versa, but nev­er­the­less, Ramis was gone, Mal­lorca had to play the final 40+ min­utes with only nine men, and Atlético was twelve yards away from basi­cally seal­ing the match.  Unfazed by his ear­lier penalty miss, For­lán coolly slot­ted the ball into the back of the net, and it was not if they would win but by how many.

Strangely, Atlético, whether by the instruc­tions of Santi Denia or by the play­ers’ own appre­hen­sions, pro­tected their 1–0 lead instead of try­ing to increase it.  They dom­i­nated the pos­ses­sion, as they should with a two-man advan­tage, but rarely cre­ated sig­nif­i­cant goal-scoring oppor­tu­ni­ties that would ruin any chance for Mal­lorca to get any­thing out of this match.  For­lán hit the tar­get a cou­ple of times, Simão forced Dudu Aouate into some good saves, and Cléber Santana’s header from a set piece trav­eled inches over the cross­bar, but their attack­ing play, as a whole, appeared stunted com­pared to nor­mal cir­cum­stances.  Their care­ful and cau­tious atti­tude would prove costly when Mal­lorca amaz­ingly equal­ized in the 91st minute to earn a point that should not have been there to retrieve.

From José Luis Martí’s free kick at mid­field, Atlético some­how allowed Borja Valero to con­trol the ball with his foot near the byline.  Valero’s ensu­ing ball was meant to be a cross across the six-yard box to Pierre Webó, but in attempt­ing to smother that cross, David de Gea allowed it to go between his legs.  If the ball went straight through his legs, Webó and Atlético defender Álvaro Domínguez each would have had a 50/50 chance at it, but as the ball squeezed through de Gea’s legs, he diverted the ball off its path with his left heel into goal.  Would Ser­gio Asenjo have com­mit­ted the same error?  Call it fate, des­tiny, the foot­ball gods, or any other super­nat­ural event; Atlético Madrid could not win a match that Mal­lorca tried to give away.

As absurd as this may sound, Mal­lorca actu­ally deserved to merit a result from this match.  The equal­izer tran­spired from a slice of good for­tune, but their tire­less work ethic and their unend­ing belief gained many admir­ers, and they dug them­selves out of a hole they cre­ated instead of slump­ing their shoul­ders and admit­ting defeat before the match was over.

What does this mean for Atlético Madrid going for­ward?  Quique Sánchez Flo­res has had suc­cess­ful spells with Valen­cia and Ben­fica, but he faces the most chal­leng­ing man­ag­ing job of his career.  Ini­tially com­pet­ing to retain its Cham­pi­ons League place, Atlético’s goals for the sea­son need to be scaled back slightly.  The sale of John Heitinga in the last min­utes of the sum­mer trans­fer win­dow to Ever­ton may not have been a glar­ing loss at the out­set, but Atlético has employed three dif­fer­ent right backs this sea­son, includ­ing life­long cen­tral defender Tomáš Ujfaluši.  None filled the posi­tion ade­quately, and a weak link in a defen­sive line can­not be masked when a decent attack­ing team puts pres­sure on them.

For an attack­ing force that includes Argen­tine bud­ding super­star Ser­gio Agüero, Simão Sabrosa, Maxi Rodríguez, Jurado, and cur­rent Euro­pean Golden Shoe win­ner Diego For­lán, ten goals in eight matches in La Liga as well as zero goals in three Cham­pi­ons League group stage games fall well below their high expec­ta­tions.  The ser­vice from the mid­field is of mediocre qual­ity, and the intri­cate pass­ing game in the final third lacks the flu­id­ity that they showed last season.

While Sánchez Flo­res and his tech­ni­cal staff can work out these prob­lems on the train­ing ground, instill­ing the poise and con­fi­dence that Atlético used to pos­sess will be their most ardu­ous task as they try to lift los roji­blan­cos from the dregs of their cur­rent form.  With­out these intan­gi­ble traits at full tilt, they will con­tinue to sur­ren­der meekly against their future oppo­nents.  All is doom and gloom at the moment, but for­tu­nately, they will not have too much time to mull over their soul-crushing draw as they have their Round of 32 Copa del Rey cup tie against Segunda División B side UD Mar­bella on Tues­day.  Atlético Madrid will likely use many of their young and bench play­ers against Mar­bella, but any poten­tial win at this point can be used as a confidence-booster in their long jour­ney from the abyss.

Fueras del Juego

- It is more of relief than con­grat­u­la­tions for Vil­lar­real as they recorded their first vic­tory of the sea­son 2–1 over Málaga on Sun­day.  It was also a first for Vil­lar­real record sign­ing Nil­mar as he net­ted his first La Liga goal for the club.

- El Golazo de la Jor­nada goes to Pablo Hernán­dez, whose forty-yard effort floated over a humil­i­ated Diego Alves as Valen­cia beat Almería at the Esta­dio Mediter­rá­neo 0–3 on Sun­day.  Alves was clearly out of posi­tion, but the fore­sight and tech­ni­cal skill nec­es­sary to exe­cute the shot by Pablo was exquisite.

- Before the Rac­ing de San­tander — Osasuna match, there was a minute of silence for the recent death of José Manuel López Alonso, for­mer pres­i­dent of Rac­ing.  Near the end of the minute, ref­eree Eduardo Itur­ralde Gon­za­lez was about to blow the whis­tle when he real­ized the minute was not quite over.  Luck­ily, he did not blow the whis­tle at that moment, but his facial expres­sions of sur­prise and embar­rass­ment were priceless.

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