Real Madrid mourning the loss of Alonso

By Evan Morgan Grahame / Expert

For Real Madrid, it’s like seeing an ex-girlfriend doing well after a breakup.

Xabi Alonso denies that the arrival of Toni Kroos from Bayern Munich compelled him to go the other way, but such was the bombastic hype that surrounded the German, and James Rodriguez, that Alonso can’t have felt particularly appreciated by Real.

He signed a two-year deal with Bayern Munich, effectively replacing Kroos in the line-up, and I really mean effectively replacing him.

Drowned out by the fanfare of Real’s incoming transfers, Alonso’s departure was still mourned by the fans and he has, in a handful of games for Bayern, already set two Bundesliga records for touches in a match (206) and most successful passes (185).

He has slotted into Pep Guardiola’s system seamlessly and, while Madrid figure out how to cope without the Spaniard, he seems to be thoroughly enjoying life in Munich.

It was a strange period post-World Cup, with every member of that champion German team bathed in the warm, amber glow of victory. Kroos was so effective during the World Cup and, along with James, was the hot player of the tournament. A young, emerging Galatico-in-the-making apparently.

Real Madrid, as they had done after Gareth Bale’s breakout season, instantly jumped at the opportunity to add him to their collection of footballing jewels. One suspects though, that they perhaps didn’t quite think it through.

The German is indeed a fine player, with attacking senses as finely honed as any central midfielder. He is able to trundle forward and impose himself on the defence, but is also able to pass fairly well from deeper areas, a vital skill for Madrid, who need a skilled quarterback to release Bale and Ronaldo.

But Kroos, unlike Alonso, is less disciplined defensively, and is less in tune with the flow of the game. If you look at Kroos’ first goal in that 7-1 rout of Brazil, his attacking instincts brought him all the way up to the edge of the box, with the ball in the wide right area.

As well taken a goal as it was by Kroos, Alonso would never be venturing that far forward for Real, or Spain for that matter, and Kroos risks exposing the defence if he does the same when playing alongside Luka Modric at Real.

Alonso was a master of controlling the tempo, of being in exactly the right position as an outlet for his colleagues, and then playing exactly the right pass. When he combined with Modric at Madrid, Alonso was a perfect foil, facilitating the Croatian to greasily turn away from markers, like he does so well, and to scurry forward.

For Real, Alonso was the much better version of what his countryman Mikel Arteta does for Arsenal – collecting the ball from the centre backs, either finding the more elusive and direct Aaron Ramsey (playing the Modric role), or passing from deep himself, rarely charging into attacking areas.

Alonso’s defensive positioning is much better than Arteta’s however, and evidently better than Kroos’, as Madrid are finding now. Madrid, with Kroos in Alonso’s area, are much less balanced. Currently, they are four points off La Liga leaders, Barcelona.

So, Carlo Ancelotti’s off-season loss, more damaging than expected, could have been the gain of any team in Europe. But it was Guardiola and his Bayern Munich project that benefited from Alonso’s arrival. Turning down an offer from Manchester United, Alonso must have valued the chance to work with Guardiola, after having seen his Barcelona side dominate Spain for so many seasons.

Rafa Benitez, Manuel Pellegrini, Jose Mourinho, Ancelotti, Vicente del Bosque and now Guardiola, Alonso will have worked with arguably the world’s most dazzling list of managers when he ends his career.

It was against FC Koln that the record for touches, previously held by Bayern’s Thiago Alcantara, was broken by Alonso. Munich had nearly 80 per cent possession, and won the game easily, 2-0.

Looking at Alonso’s individual highlights (above), he was constantly an open option, for both the attack and defence. Whenever either became bogged down or pressured, Alonso was there, in space and available. He was given the license to mix up his passing range all day, and it comes as no surprise that such an intelligent footballer has been given the responsibility of choosing whether to be more incisive or more cautious when recycling the play.

Incredibly, his performance wasn’t flawless at all. He still could have been more accurate with a few of his direct balls. His astonishing passing map (below) more resembles a plate of German spätzle than a football diagram.

Though they strolled to the Bundesliga title last season, Guardiola would have been disappointed by his team’s failure to excel in the Champions League. Stagnant was a word too often used to describe the play of the Bavarian giant, and, as the reputation of possession-above-all-else football has been eroding since Spain’s loss to Brazil in the Confederations Cup final in June last year, grumblings about whether Guardiola’s style could still work were audible.

Alonso’s addition might just kickstart the team back into contention in Europe, offering them even more control of the ball, but also a sudden piquancy in attack. The knife-edge trio of Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery and Xherdan Shaqiri will be eager to chase the swift diagonal balls that Alonso can masterfully deliver, and the Raumdeuter, Thomas Mueller, will want to foster a symbiotic relationship with the canny pass-master behind him, drifting into subtle spacial pockets to receive a pinpoint delivery.

This new dimension can only improve Bayern.

At 32, and with their shiny new Kroos arriving, Madrid might have misjudged how important Alonso was to them. With Cristiano Ronaldo scoring hat-tricks seemingly at will, their midfield instability has been obscured a little recently. But the more tactically astute onlookers, as well as Ancelotti, will be throwing remorseful looks at Bayern’s new record setter with every one of his imperious passing performances.

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-13T01:38:36+00:00

TrevorBrooking

Guest


Riquelme could. Jack Wilshere might one day.

2014-10-11T02:07:24+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Roar Guru


Xabi Alonso is the one player who exemplifies turning his weakness into a strength. His lack of general pace (himself so admitting that) means that he generally confines himself into that space either in central midfield or slightly in front of the defenders. He isn't one to go harrowing inside the penalty area to try and be at the end of a pass, as he usually is the one creating it. His presence in that role also means he has wonderful defensive instincts, in the ability to regain possession or halt an opposition's progress. Real will feel his absence, and that may in the end cost them. While a great player, I find it a bit too simplistic to say he is the reason that Liverpool stumbled in 2009/10, as there were a multitude of issues plaguing the club at the time. But there is no doubt there are few players like him. It was lovely that he cited his Liverpool loyalty as the reason he would sign for another English club, despite both Manchester United and Chelsea making offers. A man of integrity to boot.

2014-10-09T06:08:26+00:00

Nicholas Hartman

Roar Guru


I've thought about doing a thing about this myself, but work Evan. History was repeating itself when I heard Real had sold Di Maria and Alonso to buy Kroos and Rodriguez, they've made this mistake before. Constantly buying the glitzy AM Galacticos to the detriment of the team & squad balance. What makes it even more perverse is that Di Maria - who played at Benfica as a LW - only worked out at Madrid in the first place because he converted himself to a central midfield shuttler/box-to-box midfielder. And actually, CRonaldo was aware of this too. He admonished Florentino Perez for it, and according to the Spanish journalists, when you do that that you're done for at Real. That's why there's been a fair amount of talk of Ronaldo returning to Man Utd. But first, he has a goalscoring record to break.

AUTHOR

2014-10-09T05:41:29+00:00

Evan Morgan Grahame

Expert


Cheers fellas. What this whole thing shows too is how Real's reactionary Galactico-hoovering can be so damaging to team dynamics. Objectively, buying Toni Kroos can't be anything but a good thing to do but in reality, like with the Makalele example that Bryan brought up, the Madrid hierarchy have continually stuffed things up, being more disruptively impulsive than Mario Balotelli. It's lucky Ancelotti is such a calm operator. For a manager to try and run a team, with Perez whipping out the Amex whenever a player has a purple patch, man, that'd be impossible.

2014-10-09T04:56:17+00:00

Alex Chisholm

Roar Pro


Yeah spot on Harry. Losing Alonso at Liverpool had an even bigger affect at Liverpool than it's having at Real. Andrea Pirlo is the only other player that's anything close to Alonso in my opinion. There is quite literally no other player out there like this pair that can completely and utterly control a match. Great read again Evan! Alonso is still one of my favourite players despite leaving the mighty Reds. Also like your likeness of Alonso and Arteta, he is definitely a poor mans Alonso!

2014-10-09T02:57:10+00:00

HarryBalding

Roar Guru


I think you're right Evan - Alonso will be sorely, sorely missed. Just like he was at Liverpool. In my head, his departure was a major for the Reds' downfall. He adds something else to a midfield - more than just his passing, touch, and occasional goal. It's his presence: his vision and composure. I don't think I cant remember watching a player in the EPL that more effectively 'ran the show'.

2014-10-09T02:22:09+00:00

bryan

Guest


I remember a quote about selling Claude Makalele for Beckham Buying David Beckham whilst selling Makalele is akin to selling your Ferrari’s engine so that you can buy it flashier rims. Seems like this is exactly the same problem.

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