La Liga Loca

A sideways look at Spanish football


Tim Stannard and Simon Talbot

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Spanish dailies scraping barrel for Ronaldo crumbs


Monday 04 August 2008 13:00

Never let it be said that Real Madrid’s pom-pom donning, axe-wielding cheerleaders-turned-hatchet-men Marca and AS don’t put in the leg-work in their pursuit of a story (and for “story” read “party line”)
 
This week they’ve been in Manchester and London chasing this Cristiano Ronaldo thingymijig.

And despite the obstacles placed in their path – like not being allowed into Manchester United’s training ground, getting banned from Angry Alex Ferguson’s press conferences and, erm, not actually speaking any English in the case of one intrepid reporter relaying back the truth from England – they have really excelled themsleves in their service to the cause. Oh yes.


Yes... him again 

Now, La Liga Loca isn’t saying that Ronaldo definitely is not going to Madrid. He might. He might not. It’s not even saying that there is not some message lurking between the lines of Fergie’s declarations. There might be. There might not be.
 
It’s just that the evidence that Marca and AS have presented to “prove” that he definitely is going to Madrid (and to try to help make it so that he is, in fact, going to Madrid) sends the words “clutching,” “straws” and “at” leaping into La Liga Loca’s mind, doing cartwheels and banging saucepans together.

Just as they did when Marca and AS claimed that he must be going to Spain because he’s got a Spanish girlfriend – an issue they have quietly dropped since she got dumped and started displaying her charms in the tabs.  
 
Take Marca’s front cover on Sunday. (Somebody please, etc). That’s the FRONT COVER of a NATIONAL newspaper on a SUNDAY, traditionally the biggest day of the week, the preserve of the most exclusive of exclusives, the most earth-shattering of stories – like busses being found on the moon, Freddie Star eating your hamster, that sort of thing.

In fact, that’s the FRONT COVER of the country’s BEST-SELLING newspaper. And it says, “If Cristiano Ronaldo wants to go, he should just go now!” above a picture of a fat bloke in a Manchester United shirt.


Man United's man in the know 

Because, make no mistake, the opinion of a fat bloke in a Manchester United shirt with no position at the club and no neck is definitely front-page news (not to mention a great photo … wow! they’ll be proud of that one).

Especially when it’s backed up by, ooh, at least four or five other United fans – including one who’s apparently called “Bop” – who are all quoted as saying Ronaldo should leave.
 
And wait, the evidence is even more damming. Because, get this, United’s fans COMPLETELY IGNORED Ronaldo during a match he wasn’t at. There were no songs, no chants, nothing - “as if he had already gone,” said Marca. Instead, for some reason, they spent the whole time singing about some bloke called Ole or something.  
 
Which is pretty conclusive evidence that to a man (and a woman) United’s fans want shot of him. And if United fans don’t want him, he’ll definitely go.

Because football fans are never fickle and have never, ever changed their minds. And because United will obviously do whatever the fat bloke says (actually maybe that’s not so silly: after all, Ramón Calderón would).
 
Even more conclusive when you see the other evidence. Like AS and Marca’s claim that Ferguson is going soft and is already planning for a future without Ronaldo. Because, when asked about Fraizer Campbell, he insisted that the striker will stay at United because he “only” has Tevez and Rooney at centre-forward.

Which, never mind the absence of Ronaldo with injury for three months or the fact that the Portugeezer is not actually a centre-forward, obviously means that what Fergie really means is that Ronaldo won’t be there.
 
Or, more importantly, because the United manager made comments that were splashed across the front cover of AS, under the headline: “Ferguson gives in on Ronaldo.”

Comments that basically said: “it’s rare for any player to stay for more than a couple of years, especially a foreigner.” Comments that were obviously about Ronaldo’s future and how the United boss admits that he won’t stay.

Or would have been but for the fact that Ferguson was sitting next to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer at the time (a foreigner who stayed for more than two years) conducting a press conference to present the Ole Gunnar Solskjaer testimonial and responding to a question about Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.


Sir Alex and Ronaldo, disguised as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer 

But then how should AS know that? After all, they weren’t actually in the press conference to see the striker with a baby’s face grinning next to the manager with a worryingly red one.
 
But La Liga Loca’s particular favourite was Marca’s marvellous ability to get a story out of not being allowed in to United’s training ground. No access? No sightings? No quotes? No news? No nibbles? No photos apart from that one of the gate? No problem.

According to Marca, United’s training ground is like Fort Knox. Fans and press can’t get in; a sign even warms them not to hang around for autographs. And THAT is why Ronaldo wants to leave. No, really.
 
You see, Ronaldo actually WANTS to “feel the warmth of the fans” (Marca's words not La Liga Loca’s). He hates being cut off, he hates being able to work and train in peace, he hates not having fans clawing at him, clambering over his car and screaming into his ear.

He hates the fact that the paparazzi are kept at bay, he hates the fact that he doesn’t have journalists badgering him for quotes and hangers on trying to sell him watches or get tickets off him.
 
What he really, really wants – apart from a zig-a-zig-ah! – is to be at Real Madrid’s Valdebebas HQ instead, where it can take players hours to get out of there as they run the gauntlet where mates of mates of mates of mates of the president grabble at them, kiss them, and take photos and pretend to be their best pal ever, while journalists, encaged behind the bars, reach at them like madmen in an asylum.

THAT is what he wants. After all, Madrid’s current players love it. Which is why Robinho has spent the past year leaving out the back window. 

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About Tim Stannard and Simon Talbot

When he isn't fighting the evil forces of flamenco or attracting libel actions for La Liga Loca, Tim Stannard is building his media empire in Madrid. As well as contributing to Football365 and doing odd jobs elsewhere, Tim also works in the glamorous world of television as a producer, script writer, news editor, coffee boy and stand-in fluffer.

Simon Talbot? Well, he's a man of mystery.

Comments

  August 4, 2008 17:30

BigWelshDefender said:

And i thought The Sun was bad!...

  August 5, 2008 00:54

Guerrero said:

Wow. They could work here (USA) as political campaign managers...

  August 5, 2008 11:32

Nicholas said:

Great post, Marca's front cover made me laugh

  August 5, 2008 15:56

stetoye said:

Well Done... Good to see someone pin-pointing the sheer stupidity of these 'newspapers', Personally, I'd believe what's written in the Beano quicker than the tabloids... They'd do anything to sell a paper!!

  August 7, 2008 06:38

danny76 said:

TABLOIDS CAUGHT LYING TO THE PUBLIC FOR BENEFIT OF SALES SHOCK?