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Confessions of a Correspondent

The real-life tales of a football writer


Andy Mitten

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Barca & Espanyol unite to honour Jarque


Monday 10 August 2009 16:00

When I wrote the blog about Espanyol last week, I didn’t think I’d be writing my next one about the white and blues as well.

Espanyol are Barcelona’s second club, forever patronized by the media. They can’t and don’t try to compete with the world famous Barca juggernaut.

Their trophy cabinet holds just four domestic cups won in 1929, 1940, 2000 and 2006 – though they reached the 2007 UEFA Cup final and they are sixth in the respected all-time Spanish league table behind Real Madrid, Barcelona, Athletic Bilbao, Valencia and Atletico Madrid.

Espanyol are a proud club, but they’re the mouse who shares the room with the Barca elephant.

Espanyol have appeared in European finals before and seen the news relegated to the inside pages because Johan Cruyff sneezing at the Camp Nou was deemed more newsworthy.


Johan prepares to make headline news... 

In 1988, Espanyol reached the UEFA Cup final, beating three former European champions en route including the Milan of Gullit and Van Basten.

In the first leg they beat Bayer Leverkusen 3-0. Sport, one of the two main Catalan sport dailies, printed a picture of Barca coach Cruyff on their front page the following day, with Espanyol’s achievements relegated inside.

When a team can’t make the front page of a sports paper in their home city after taking a 3-0 lead in a European final, you can understand any paranoia from Espanyol fans.

It will give their many fans no pleasure whatsoever that Espanyol are on the front pages today after their captain Dani Jarque died of a heart attack on Saturday night.

The first I knew was when I bumped into a lad in the street at midnight in Barcelona.

He’s an Espanyol season ticket holder and he was stunned as he said: "Jarque’s dead."

The lad is also a heavyweight boxer who hails from Belfast, a hard man who has been seduced by the little birds who wear blue and white.

Espanyol get under the skin of their followers like that.

The story is horrific. Jarque was on the phone to his girlfriend, who is seven months pregnant, from a hotel room near Florence.

Espanyol were playing a pre-season tour in Italy, with optimism at the club higher than I have ever known.

Jarque then suffered a heart attack and died. His desperate girlfriend raised the alarm, but club doctors and Italian paramedics were unable to revive him.

Jarque brought great pleasure to many, leading a brilliant life whose crowning glory came less than a week before he died.

Newly installed as Espanyol captain, he led his team-mates out in their new stadium in front of 40,000 emotional fans for a friendly against Liverpool.

They’ve waited 12 years to return to a home of their own, but the wait appeared worth it and the atmosphere was incredible.

Born and raised in the nearby barrio of Sant Boi, Jarque joined Espanyol at 12. He made his first team debut aged 19 in 2002, the same year he was a European champion with Spain’s U19 side.

He was held as an example to Espanyol’s youth players that they could reach the first team and enjoy the success of Jarque, who was part of the team which won the Copa Del Ray in 2006 and reached the UEFA Cup final.

He was made club captain only weeks ago, replacing club hero Raul Tamudo as Espanyol sought a fresh direction in their new home.

Espanyol are in shock. "The players are destroyed," said club director German de la Cruz. "One minute he was there with them, and the next he’s gone. It’s terrible."

Rivals and neighbours Barcelona have been exceptional in their conduct.

Andres Iniesta played in the same Spain team as Jarque and they are friends. Many played with him for the Catalan national side.

While Joseph Guardiola and president Joan Laporta offered heartfelt condolences and Captain Puyol rang his former Barca team-mate and current Espanyol star Ivan de la Pena to convey the sorrow from the Barca camp.

Barca also wore black armbands as a mark of tribute in their friendly game in San Francisco yesterday.

Jarque’s death comes nearly two years after Seville’s Antonio Puerta died due to heart failure three days after collapsing during a Primera Liga match against Getafe.


Barcelona all sport 'Puerta' Sevilla shirts in 2007 

After the tributes, there will be more questions about why an ultra fit athlete died in his physical prime.

Cameroon midfielder Marc-Vivien Foe, Benfica striker Miklus Feher and Motherwell midfielder Phil O’Donnell also died because of heart failure and Real Madrid’s Ruben de la Red will not play this season because of a heart condition.

A shattered Espanyol will go on.

As the tributes grow by gate 21 at the new stadium (Jarque’s shirt number), there are understandable calls for their new home to take his name.

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FourFourTwo.com: More to read...

La Liga Loca: Espanyol mourn loss of their Perico prince

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About Andy Mitten

Andy Mitten – whose great uncle Charlie Mitten starred in Matt Busby’s first great side – started United We Stand, which he still edits, aged 15 in 1989. A regular writer for FourFourTwo, his other credits include The Independent, The Mail on Sunday, Sport, The Guardian and GQ in the UK plus foreign publications around the world. He has visited 85 countries in every continent, covering derby games from Israel to the Faroes, and interviewed players like Ronaldinho, Keane, Gerrard, Messi and John Gidman.
He has written or co-written 10 books including the critically acclaimed We're the Famous Man United, Glory Glory!, Paddy Crerand’s autobiography Never Turn The Other Cheek and Mad For It – From Blackpool to Barcelona, Football’s Greatest Rivalries. Manchester born and red, Andy divides his time between M16 and Barcelona.

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