This post has already been read 2331 times!
Real Madrid are one of the grandest clubs in World Football, and they currently sit at 6th in the league table, struggling for goals and results this year after the departure of their leading goalscorer, Cristiano Ronaldo, and club legend, three-peat winning manager Zinedine Zidane. The problems are really piling on for Los Blancos, and they look way off from being the club that lifted the Champions League 4 times in the last 5 years.
They brought in former Spain coach Julen Lopetegui rather unceremoniously and ominously, to replace the enigmatic Frenchman and the former Porto boss ended up having the shortest stint of any manager at the Real Madrid hot-seat after a drubbing at the hands of FC Barcelona.
There are a lot of problems that plague the Madrid squad, and Zidane famously said “The time is right” when he left. He added,
“It’s not a decision I’ve taken lightly. I thought about it carefully and it’s the right decision, even though I imagine many may not agree. After three years Real Madrid needs a change, another way of working, another idea, if we are to continue winning. I feel it’s going to be difficult to continue winning. And because I’m a winner, I’m going.”
That basically sums it all up. He knew before any of us did that the squad has a lot of underlying issues, and with Cristiano Ronaldo no longer present to paper over the cracks with his plethora of goals. Let’s take a look at what the club and its hierarchy could do to improve the situation, and get the club back to the top where it deserves to be.
1) Reducing the President’s role
Don’t get it wrong, fans are eternally grateful for everything he’s done for the club, bringing in one of the most successful eras in the club’s rich 116-year history. Papa Perez has been a key figure at the club, responsible for all incoming signings of key players such as Toni Kroos, Luka Modric, Gareth Bale to name but a few.
The club have looked in dire need of a sporting director now, and whilst they are the first name that comes to mind when one says European Superclub, they have quite an archaic footballing model that still persists at the club, where the President, assisted by his board of directors makes all decisions for the club.
Appointing a Sporting Director and a technical staff to support him would give the club a new lease on life, bringing in fresh ideas and some much-needed change, as the squad seems to have stagnated in terms of growth and the results they are achieving.
Hiring a person who would run the day to day of the club whilst making the best footballing decisions to help the team progress seems to be the best way for the club to return to the pinnacle of world football. The question is, will Perez & Co. allow it.
2) Revamping the squad
Real Madrid ditched their policy of spending big on players ever since the purchase of James Rodriguez for 80 Million Euros after the 2014 World Cup and their last major incomings for the first XI were Toni Kroos and Keylor Navas, who were also purchased later in the same transfer window.
All of Keylor Navas, Sergio Ramos, Marcelo, Luka Modric, Karim Benzema are above the age of 30. Varane, Isco, Carvajal, Casemiro, Bale, and Kroos are all in their mid to late twenties. This should be a major issue of concern, as most of these players are locked in through 2021 or beyond and most are on the sort of wages that make them difficult to sell, even if there was interest from any other club (which there isn’t).
Defensive reinforcements are much needed, as the club also has to start thinking about Captain Marvel Sergio Ramos, who isn’t getting any younger.
The club needs to buy someone who brings them goals and some sense of inventiveness in the final third, as Real have looked toothless at times this season. There is a Ronaldo shaped hole in the squad that needs to be filled, and it certainly won’t be filled by the mediocre Mariano Diaz, who’s scored only one goal so far since his return from Lyon earlier in the summer.
Kylian Mbappe should be the club’s most serious target, given his incredible output, searing pace and the most appealing of all, his age, at 19 he has more than 10 years at the top level, which makes him seem a match made in heaven for the Blancos.
The plan should be to bring this team down and start from scratch with just a few cornerstones. That wasn’t the case in the summer, as Perez instead chose to rely on Karim Benzema and Gareth Bale to replace the output of the club’s best ever player, despite never showing themselves to be capable of producing such numbers. A re-haul of this squad is what’s best for the club, and the sooner the hierarchy realizes that the better.