Can Deportivo La Coruña be “Super Depor” Again?

by Andy Pineda on October 19, 2009 · 0 comments

spaceball Can Deportivo La Coruña be Super Depor Again?Deportivo La CorunaAn impres­sive 1–0 win by Deportivo La Coruña over Sevilla on Sat­ur­day raises Depor to a tie of third place with Sevilla at fif­teen points, four points behind league lead­ers FC Barcelona.  Los blan­quiazules have won five of their first seven matches this sea­son, and their only two losses came at the hands of Espanyol 2–3 and Real Madrid 2–3.  Depor has built their suc­cess this sea­son on their quick counter-attacking abil­ity and their posi­tional defense.  Besides their 0–3 drub­bing of lowly Xerez at Chapín, Depor’s other four vic­to­ries ended in 1–0 score lines in favor the Gali­cian club.

The Depor — Sevilla match was a micro­cosm of how Deportivo La Coruña con­tin­ued their solid form.  For the first fif­teen min­utes, Depor can­celed out any sem­blance of a Sevilla attack.  Sevilla was some­what hand­i­capped by injuries and the pre­vi­ous week’s World Cup qual­i­fiers.  A major­ity of Sevilla’s play­ers per­formed in the inter­na­tional break, includ­ing their stal­wart cen­tral defender Sébastien Squil­laci, who missed the Depor match with a calf injury sus­tained while play­ing for France, and Luís Fabi­ano, who was not included in the match day squad because of his long trav­els from South Amer­ica with the Seleção.  Andrés Palop, unre­lated to the World Cup qual­i­fiers, also had a calf injury and was forced to miss the clash with Depor.

The break­through came in the 38th minute when Juan Rodríguez absolutely uncorked a low-range mis­sile from twenty-five yards that struck the frame and sneaked into goal to beat deputy goal­keeper Javi Varas on his near post.  From a long diag­o­nal ball, Depor flicked it on towards goal, but with no team­mate in the area, it was a sim­ple clear­ance for the left back Fer­nando Navarro, but he scuffed it right into the direc­tion of Rodríguez.  Rodríguez set­tled the ball, took one touch for­ward, and sent a lash of fury past a defense­less Javi Varas.

Rather than retreat­ing into a shell after cap­tur­ing the lead, Deportivo La Coruña actively sought after the sec­ond goal to seal the three points.  In the first minute of stop­page time to end the first half, Iván Pérez swung a free kick from near the edge of the penalty area, and Riki cre­ated space for him­self to make con­tact on the free kick.  Riki struck his header cleanly, but Javi Varas exhib­ited his cat-like quick­ness and bat­ted the ball wide of his left near post.  Even though Sevilla pos­sessed the ball for 59% of the half, they hardly did any­thing with it.  They did not have a shot on goal, while Depor seemed to have more impe­tus in all phases of the game.  Depor deserved the 1–0 lead.  Whether Sevilla’s phleg­matic play and lack of vital­ity were due to injuries or gen­eral fatigue from World Cup qual­i­fiers, they inex­cus­ably ghosted through the first half.

Sevilla picked up their play in the sec­ond half and pinned Deportivo La Coruña in their own half of the pitch for a major­ity of the time, but Sevilla man­aged only one shot on tar­get, and Daniel Aranzu­bia rou­tinely tipped Álvaro Negredo’s shot over the cross­bar.  At the end of the match, with Depor hang­ing on to their one-goal advan­tage, Mex­i­can inter­na­tional Andrés Guardado exem­pli­fied his team’s unend­ing work rate and fight­ing spirit.  Guardado did not have a par­tic­u­larly great game and did not influ­ence the Depor attack in accor­dance with his usual high stan­dards, but his mediocre per­for­mance was not due to a dearth of energy.

In the 93rd minute, Depor was eat­ing the sec­onds away at this point, and Guardado was sent on a long run down the right wing.  The diag­o­nal ball was well past Guardado, and it would have been excus­able if he let the ball go into touch, but Guardado ran at full speed and slid to keep the ball in play.  That touch was a lit­tle heavy, and the ball headed toward the end line, but Guardado picked him­self up and made another slide to pre­vent a goal kick.  At most, his efforts cost Sevilla five or six sec­onds, but those pre­cious sec­onds were para­mount with Sevilla try­ing to equal­ize late in the game, and this unselfish atti­tude was evi­dent through­out the squad.

With Deportivo La Coruña’s inspir­ing start to this season’s cam­paign, there will be inevitable com­par­isons to the suc­cess of the Super Depor teams of the late 1990s and early 2000s.  One glar­ing dif­fer­ence between the two eras is the attack­ing tal­ent and skill.  With “Das Phan­tom” Roy Makaay, Diego Tristán, and “El Rifle” Wal­ter Pan­di­ani up front, Deportivo La Coruña con­tin­u­ally was one of the top scor­ing teams in La Liga.  No one will mis­take Riki, Adrián, and Iván Pérez for the for­mer trio, but they are capa­ble of scor­ing the impor­tant goals if not nec­es­sar­ily a high quan­tity of goals.

Andrés Guardado is fast becom­ing a force in La Liga with his pace and skill, sim­i­lar to for­mer Depor wingers Albert Luque and Fran González.  Juan Rodríguez admirably fills the defen­sive mid­fielder role pre­vi­ously occu­pied by Aldo Duscher and Depor leg­end Mauro Silva.  The back line remains a strength as cur­rent right back and cap­tain Manuel Pablo lends his lead­er­ship and skills to his defen­sive mates.  He was a main part of those for­mer Depor teams, so he has the expe­ri­ence of wit­ness­ing Depor at their stratos­pheric heights.  The other two holdovers from the Super Depor days are box-to-box mid­fielder Ser­gio González and the mid­field play­maker Juan Car­los Valerón.

With the lim­ited bud­get that Deportivo La Coruña cur­rently works under these days, they can­not afford to bring in expen­sive tal­ent as they did ten years ago.  They have to rely more on indus­try and guile than the flair and style to what they became accus­tomed when Javier Irureta roamed the tech­ni­cal area.  Cur­rent entre­nador Miguel Ángel Lotina keeps this mod­est squad in the top half of the table, and with the back­ing of club pres­i­dent Augusto Lendoiro, Lotina’s only wor­ries per­tain to the improve­ment of the team and its results rather than always look­ing behind his shoul­der.  A renais­sance to domes­tic and Euro­pean glory is obvi­ously pre­ma­ture, but the build­ing blocks are cur­rently in place for Depor to con­tinue their slow and steady ascent toward their for­mer perch as one of the lead­ing lights of Span­ish football.

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