Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 1084 Tue. June 19, 2007  
   
Sports


The 'comeback kings'


The front page of the Spanish sports daily Marca said it all on Monday, above a picture of the Real Madrid squad celebrating their Spanish title win.

"I've won the league of the comebacks," ran the headline of Spain's biggest selling newspaper, clearly anticipating the emotions of the Real players.

Real Madrid seemed down-and-out of the championship race in March, lying third and five points in arrears of the league leaders and bitter rivals Barcelona but only suffered one loss in their last 17 games.

"The miracle factory," reflected another Spanish sports daily As on Monday. "Another epic comeback by Madrid in the closest league for many years," added the respected mainstream daily El Pais.

The Spanish title was the first to end with two teams on level points since 1994, with Real getting the verdict over Barcelona owing to their better head-to-head record.

"Madrid, at last, win the league after four years," added another Spanish newspaper ABC, with just a hint of pro-Madrid editorial bias.

The Barcelona-based national papers inevitably took the side of their local team.

"In the end, the miracle disappeared into smoke," said El Periodico on its front page, alongside a picture of a downcast Ronaldinho trooping off the field despite Barca having thrashed bottom club Gimnastic Tarragona 5-1.

Real needed to win to ensure their record 30th title and they did just that, coming from one goal down to capture the championship with three second half goals to beat Real Mallorca 3-1.

Dutch legend Johan Cruyff, who tasted success with Barca as both a player and a coach, tried to pour a little bit of literary cold water on Real's celebrations in his column in La Vanguardia.

"The irony of football is that it's easier to take decisions when you lose. When you win, as happened with Barcelona last season, you want to touch as little as possible. Now Madrid have that hot potato," said Cruyff.

However, not even Cruyff's well-reasoned insight was likely to distract the majority of the Spanish media on Monday, who embarked an almost-rabid congratulatory stream of prose.

"Madrid go to heaven," added As on its inside pages. "The biggest fiesta you've ever dreamed of. There has been 1,456 days since Real Madrid celebrated a league," commented Marca.

There were a lot of sore heads in Madrid on Monday morning, and not just among Spanish newspaper journalists.

An estimated 500,000 Madrid fans flocked to the Cibeles fountain in the centre of the Spanish capital, the traditional celebration point for the club's supporters.

This year, a massive police cordon stopped supporters from reaching the monument as considerable damage has been caused in previous years.

Shields were also erected high above central statue of the goddess of fertility to stop the fans performing the Spanish ritual of throwing bottles into the fountain.

Denied their usual fun, several groups of youths decided instead to throw bottles at the police, which provoking a response of baton charges.

Spanish television pictures showed police apprehending several people and others being treated for injuries but no figures of arrests or hospital admissions have yet to be released.

Picture
(L) Farewell boys Roberto Carlos and David Beckham embrace at the end of their final match for Real Madrid. (C) A glittering all-star cast that included tennis star Rafael Nadal (top-left), Victoria Beckham (bottom) alongside Hollywood superstar Tom Cruise and his wife Katie Holmes watch proceedings with interest. (R) Real captain Raul Gonzalez places the Spanish flag on the Cibeles fountain in Madrid during a victory parade on Sunday night. PHOTO: AFP