Thursday, 5 April 2012

LLL: Fear of failure spooking Camp Nou collective ahead of Milan showdown

When Cristiano Ronaldo scored his wonder-thwack against Osasuna on Saturday and revealed a shapely thigh, it was enough to send Josep María Casanovas off the edge, with the Sport writer claiming on Monday that this was yet more evidence of the moral superiority of Leo Messi over what he considers to be a comparitively vulgar Portuguese prole. “He couldn’t think of any other celebration than to lift up his shorts leg, show off the muscle and tell his team-mates: ‘what a great leg I have, it’s a cannon’”.

In actual fact, Ronaldo was making a private joke with Madrid’s back-up keeper Antonio Adán, who had mocked the forward for only working on his upper body in the gym, but why let a wee fact get in the way of another body blow in the endless Clásico wars. 

This led LLL to think that surely the culé crazies had bigger fish to fry this week, and sure enough by Tuesday morning Casanovas was finally focussed on a matter considerably more important than Ronaldo’s manly thighs - AC Milan coming to the Camp Nou in the second leg of their Champions League semi-final.

The writer continues a theme in the Catalan capital ahead of the game, that the Milan meeting is a final that isn’t a final but in actual fact is a final. “It’s the most important match of the season. Spectacle won’t be enough, no other result that a win for Barça will do.” The paper is once again calling for the fans to play their part in the match - usually a definite sign of panic - by clapping occasionally and making making the odd whoop of encouragement. “With this support, with this team, today we’ll go to the semis!” yells the cheerleading front cover. 

There are few outward signs of nerves, with Francesc Aguilar over at Mundo Deportivo getting rather excited about a “night of champions, superstars, some of those of Barça who are the best in the world and will want to confirm this.” 

This bravado designed to ease the bone-clattering of the culé collective expresses genuine nail-biting stress that this is a clash where Barcelona may not win out and that it will be the dastardly Italians and their defensive ways going through to the semi-finals.  

Barça battle through as Mourinho rubbishes rumours

 Whenever supporters of Real Madrid and Barcelona whine, bleat and stomp their feet about how they are so, so, so hard done by when it comes to referees, La Liga Loca always reminds such complainants of the notion of 'swings and roundabouts' in football and how everything tends to even itself up at the end of the season. 

But the philosophy came into play in Barcelona’s double header with AC Milan. Alexis Sanchez was denied a decent penalty shout in the first leg, but the Catalan club got a favourable decision in the second. Alessandro Nesta’s naughty tug on Sergio Busquets, a player who doesn’t need much encouragement to go to ground, was spotted by the referee, who (eventually) pointed to the spot.

The happy-go-lucky Zlatan Ibrahimovic was not impressed. “I now know what Mourinho meant about coming to the Camp Nou” the Swede grumbled. Meanwhile, the Madrid manager’s ‘spokesman’ Eladio Paramés tweeted “after the first 45 minutes we now know who is going to win the Champions League.”
LLL says simply "them’s the breaks."

“Barcelona are officially the best team of the 21st century. Three titles and five consecutive semi-finals show this,” boasts Lluís Mascaró, who is already looking forward to a Clásico-themed final and what could be a major, major back pedal should Barcelona eventually come out second best. “The winner of this ‘mother of all finals’ would be the ‘champion of champions’. The loser would suffer a difficult to overcome sporting and psychological reverse.”

The may be a distinct lack of similar tension in Wednesday night’s Champions League clash between Real Madrid and APOEL, with the Spanish side 3-0 up from the first leg and hosting their Cypriot rivals in the Santiago Bernabeu, where the home team only tend to lose to sides rhyming with ‘Carcelona’.

 Valencia are on the brink of oblivion, with poor Unai Emery facing a game in an angry Mestalla against AZ Alkmaar, who have a 2-1 lead from the first leg. Meanwhile, European heroes Athletic Bilbao will be defending a 4-2 advantage in San Mamés against Schalke, with Marca predicting a giant tribute from the home fans for the former Real Madrid man, Raúl. LLL has a feeling that this may be a dream that won’t be coming true. 

MTM> Btw, Valencia only won 3 in their last 18! games. And are visiting the Santiago Bernabeu on the weekend. G'luck with that.

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