Liverpool - Real Madrid: Confidence, talent, luck... But why do Real always win in the end?

FOOTBALL Buoyed by Thibaut Courtois in the final and Karim Benzema in the previous rounds, Real Madrid have carried the success of the Champions League all season long.

  • Without an extraordinary Thibaut Courtois, Real Madrid would never have beaten Liverpool 1-0 at the Stade de France on Saturday.
  • The term resilience seems to have been invented for these Merengues, so often tossed about this season in the Champions League, and finally victorious.
  • Real added a 14th Champions League title to their trophy cabinet, twice as many as second-placed AC Milan.

At the Stade de France

The Liverpool fans, some of whom had had such a hard time getting in, preferred to leave rather than see this after the Reds' 1-0 defeat. So it was to a Stade de France virtually devoid of its red component that Marcelo, Real Madrid's soul on the bench on Saturday evening, held up the Champions League trophy. It was the Spanish club's 14th victory in Europe's most prestigious competition, a record that has now been bettered.

But it is undoubtedly the most incredible, given that the Merengues have often looked fragile this season, and sometimes even inferior to their opponents in the final stages of the Champions League. And yet they have managed to pull off a series of turnarounds that not even the boldest of scriptwriters would have dared suggest to a producer. Behind a smile that seemed forced for once, Jürgen Klopp was clearly wondering how his Reds had failed to beat the Real side they had so badly beaten.

"We took 23 shots, nine of which were on target," explained "OptaJürgen" to the press, before turning his attention to his opponents, whom he was naturally keen to congratulate: "Real only had one shot on target. But it was the right one, from a missed Valverde shot that was tapped in at the far post by Vinicius just before the hour mark...

Courtois, the guardian angel

As is often the case this season, "Saint Thibaut" Courtois dominated the match. The Belgian goalkeeper made a monstrous nine saves to disgust Mohamed Salah, who is cursed to face Real in the final (even when Ramos is no longer there to injure him, as he did in 2018). Courtois, whose ego is as solid as it is assertive, also pulled off a Martian-like save in the 20th minute, deflecting a clever little gem from Sadio Mané onto the post. The 2018 FIFA World Cup semi-finalist finally has the victory he has so longed for, at least since he stumbled on the last step with Atlético in 2014 against... Real.

Speaking to BT Sport, the most agile of double-metre players went for the grandiloquent (but accurate): "Yesterday [Friday], in the press conference, I said that when Madrid played finals, they won them. I was on the right side of history. The White House has only lost three finals, in 1962, 1964 and 1981. Since that last defeat to Liverpool at the Parc des Princes (1-0) at the dawn of the Mitterrand era, they have won eight finals, sometimes easily, sometimes by the skin of their teeth. But won nonetheless...

Ancelotti, a man of records

It's easier to win the Champions League with Real than with any other team," says Carlo Ancelotti. The particular passion of the supporters, the history, the structure of the club... All that makes the club special." The Italian is himself a winner at heart, despite some less brilliant recent seasons at Everton and Napoli: having previously won the title twice as a player, this Saturday he set a new record of four Champions Leagues as a coach, with Milan (2003 and 2007) and Real (2014 and 2022), with just one defeat to Liverpool (2005).

"This team is easy to coach," continues the Mister. The dressing room was calm as we prepared for this match. The players have incredible confidence. That confidence comes with the history of this club. That's rare in football. And even unique. So much so, in fact, that we are more inclined to subscribe to the theory of the winner's DNA than to the 'Carlo's pussy' theory, which is easily defensible this season: not to mention the final, Madrid lost the first leg of the last 16 to PSG, the quarter-final second leg to Chelsea and the semi-final first leg to Manchester City.

"There's no such thing as luck", says Karim Benzema

Each time, Real came close to taking the lead, and each time they slipped through the window to the next round, buoyed by future Ballon d'Or winner Karim Benzema, scorer of 15 C1 goals this season, including 10 in the knockout phase. Benzema's 16th was disallowed late in the first half on Saturday for an offside flag that was confirmed after an interminable VAR call. There's no such thing as luck," the captain of five European Cups, one of the guarantors along with Modric and Marcelo of the group's balance, told Canal+. You can be lucky once, but not every time. We deserve our victory. We made an effort, we came back every time, we never gave up.

Wearing a T-shirt bearing the "14" logo that was as eloquent as it was unattractive, Ancelotti added another layer of praise in the Stade de France press room: "At the start of the season, nobody thought we could win this competition. We deserved it. We suffered a lot along the way, but we never lost heart. Even when Kylian Mbappé opted to stay at PSG after a whirlwind telenovela? "Today, Mbappé doesn't exist, there's the Real Madrid party," said president Florentino Perez on Spanish channel Movistar, with the insolence of people who succeed in everything.

Text by Nicolas Stival 20Minutes.fr

Football: the "Big Five" mercato

Whether in England, Italy, Germany, Spain or France, the mercato that ended on Tuesday evening was full of surprises. But the market continues to be held back by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has forced many of the biggest clubs to tighten their belts yet again.

This summer's mercato will live long in the memory. Firstly, because of Lionel Messi's spectacular arrival at Paris Saint-Germain. But also because of Cristiano Ronaldo's return to Manchester United.

But the movements of the two most successful Ballon d'Or winners - six for the Argentinian and five for the Portuguese - conceal another reality: the health crisis has put a strain on the finances of European clubs, most of whom have had to limit their spending. Here are the key figures from the summer mercato.

Spending still on the decline

With the exception of the Bundesliga, the major European leagues spent less during the 2021 summer mercato than they did last year, which was already marked by a sharp decline caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Of the five major European leagues, Italy's Serie A and Spain's La Liga saw the biggest falls (-25 % and -27 % respectively).

The Premier League as dynamic as ever

The Premier League is indeed the most powerful league in Europe: despite the difficult economic climate, English clubs spent over €1.5 billion on transfers this summer. That's almost three times more than all the clubs in Ligue 1 put together.

The transfer of Jack Grealish to Manchester City (€117.5 million), Romelu Lukaku to Chelsea (€115 million) and Jadon Sancho to Manchester United (€85 million) were the three biggest European moves of the mercato.

Serie A: renewed appeal after the UEFA EURO?

Following the 'Squadra Azzura's' Euro triumph, Italy's Serie A is set to enjoy a resurgence in popularity for the 2021-2022 season. The Italian league has lost Cristiano Ronaldo, Gianluigi Donnarumma and Romelu Lukaku, but it has managed to retain a large number of players from the European champion national team.

In total, Italian clubs spent 552 million euros on transfers. This is considerably less than last year (732 million).

German Bundesliga maintained

German clubs are the only ones to have spent more in 2021 than in 2020 (+42 %). However, according to KPMG, the German league has suffered the most from the closure of stadiums due to Covid, with losses of €157 million for the 18 clubs in Germany's top flight. By comparison, Ligue 1 lost €48 million in ticket revenue.

Last season's runners-up, RB Leipzig, confirmed their rise to prominence by spending €107.8 million this summer, more than three times as much as last year. Bayern Munich, for their part, dropped 57.5 million, compared with just over 62 million the previous year. In total, German clubs spent €416 million on transfers.

Ligue 1 led by PSG

As has been the case every year since the summer of 2011-2012, Paris Saint-Germain are the biggest spenders at the French mercato. This summer, the club paid over €80 million, including almost €60 million to acquire the services of Moroccan international Achraf Hakimi.

Another highlight of the French mercato was the arrival of Lionel Messi in Paris. The transfer cost Paris Saint-Germain nothing, as 'La Pulga' was at the end of his contract with Barcelona. Finally, the story of Kylian Mbappé's possible departure for Real ended in a non-event. For the time being.

Behind the Paris giants, Stade Rennais were the biggest spenders in France, splashing out almost €80 million on seven players, including Montpellier striker Gaëtan Laborde. In search of reinforcements in the final days of the summer transfer market, Olympique Lyonnais ended the transfer window almost empty-handed.

Austerity cure for Spanish Liga

Spanish top flight clubs spent a total of 293 million euros during the summer mercato, compared to almost 400 million last year (-27 %). This was due to the austerity measures imposed on clubs across the Pyrenees, including the introduction of a wage cap. In first place, Atlético Madrid have spent 65 million euros but have not yet paid anything to bring back Antoine Griezmann. The French world champion, who left the club for Barcelona two years ago, has returned on loan after two disappointing seasons in Catalonia. 1

Real Madrid completed just one transaction to acquire French midfielder Eduardo Camavinga on the final day of the mercato for €31 million (excluding bonuses). Austrian defender David Alaba, meanwhile, arrived on a free transfer. Faced with serious financial difficulties and heavily penalised by the salary cap, which forced them to let Lionel Messi go, Barcelona spent just €15 million.

text by PERRUCHE Clément lesechos.fr