Carlo Ancelotti completed football with Real Madrid, while there was drama at the bottom if not so much at the top
It started in tears. Lionel Messi touched down on the evening of 4 August, flying into El Prat especially. Officially unemployed, he had come to sign the contract that would see him play a 17th season at Barcelona but by the time it began he was gone, like Zinedine Zidane and Sergio Ramos before him. Three of the most significant men in Spanish football over the last decade had departed in a single summer. Yet at his presentation in Paris just two days before it all started at Mestalla, on a day that felt all wrong then and feels a world away now, Messi insisted: “In the end what matters is the teams: Barcelona and Madrid are still there, so are Sevilla, Valencia, Atlético.”
And the rest. Although it wasn’t what they had planned, turning up in part because no one else had and with few appreciating how significant it was it at the time, the most successful coach in European football was there too, Carlo Ancelotti quietly arriving back in town. So, at last, were the fans. A few of them at first, then more and more until eventually stadiums were full. “I had waited a long time to live this moment,” Athletic coach Marcelino García Toral said, speaking for everyone, when he finally saw and felt San Mames something like the way it’s supposed to be. “Waking up on a Sunday morning to go to the ground with your family or friends is beautiful. People need football and football needs the people; they are football,” Diego Simeone insisted.
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