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Real Madrid’s Argentinian coach Santiago Solari reacts during the Spanish league football match between Club Atletico de Madrid and Real Madrid CF at the Wanda Metropolitano stadium in Madrid on February 9, 2019. (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP) |
Real Madrid against Ajax would
typically be a clash of stars against prodigies but when they face each
other in the Champions League last 16 on Wednesday, the difference will
be harder to distinguish.
Ajax will have their latest crop of young gems at the Johan Cruyff
Arena, where Frenkie de Jong and Matthijs de Ligt will attempt to live
up to already-swelling reputations while the likes of Donny van de Beek,
Andre Onana and Kasper Dolberg could also enhance theirs.
The surprise is less that Ajax’s line-up will be sprinkled with emerging talents than the expectation Madrid’s will be too.
Gareth Bale aside, the galacticos are gone, replaced by a handful of
prospects trying to forge their own way through, only at the biggest and
most demanding club in the world.
The shift was not so much initiated by the current coach Santiago
Solari, whose predecessors Zinedine Zidane and Julen Lopetegui both used
youth when they had to, primarily to rest key players or remind them
their place was not guaranteed.
But in the biggest games, Zidane and Lopetegui were drawn to
experience, while Solari has made youth first choice since being tasked
with rejuvenating his team in November.
Vinicius Junior has had less time than Ajax’s De Jong, with only six
starts in La Liga and one in the Champions League, but his impact has
been arguably just as dramatic, the hype around the Brazilian already
comparable.
Signed last summer for 45 million euros, Vinicius was supposed to
spend his debut season settling in with the reserve side, a strategy
adhered to, perhaps too rigidly, by Lopetegui.
“He’s very young and has just arrived in Europe,” Lopetegui said.
“He’s very keen to learn and we’ve got to give him the time to settle
that every player needs.”
Solari, in charge of Real Madrid B at the time, was the coach that
received him, witnessing first-hand as the 18-year-old scored twice
against Atletico B, curled in a free-kick against Unionistas and
equalised against Celta Vigo B.
Vinicius was raw but when Lopetegui was sacked, Solari had greater
legitimacy to promote him. He had faith too. Solari gave Vinicius 90
minutes in his first match in charge, more than Lopetegui had in all 14
of his.
Almost four months on, Vinicius has 22 appearances for the first
team, the latest pair against Barcelona at the Camp Nou and Atletico
Madrid at the Wanda Metropolitano. In both, he was Madrid’s greatest
threat, to the extent that even Bale’s starting spot has been
questioned.
“His adaptation has been very fast,” Solari said. “He is 18 and he
has adapted to a new country, a new culture, a different type of
football. He has shown his talent but we have to take care of him.”
Vinicius is the poster boy of Solari’s meritocracy, an approach that puts reputation far below humility and hard work.
Among those to lose out have been Isco, who is yet to start a league
game under Solari, and Marcelo, whose form deteriorated at the start of
the year. Casemiro has also been relegated to the bench.
Among the fresh faces to come in have been Sergio Reguilon at left
back, the Spanish 22-year-old with a wand of a left foot, Marcos
Llorente in defensive midfield, and Dani Ceballos, who could make the
transition after Luka Modric slightly easier to bear.
Together, Vinicius, Reguilon, Llorente and Ceballos have played 64
games since Solari was appointed. “They are the future of Real Madrid,”
Solari said. “Therefore, they have to be part of the present.”
But the present is now a strenuous few weeks when Madrid’s season
could be defined by matches against the best opponents, both in La Liga
and Europe.
Jorge Valdano who, like Solari, played for Real Madrid, coached the
youth side and then managed first team, said last month that youngsters
should ideally be introduced gradually, allowed to bed in while more
experienced players shoulder the responsibility.
Solari has had to fast-track his fledglings and so far that faith has
been rewarded. Ajax, and the Champions League knock-out stages, is the
next test.
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