Unlike last year, deadline day came and went without incident at Real
Madrid. In 2015, the club were left red-faced after failing to sort out
the paperwork to sign David De Gea. This time, there was little
activity all summer as only Alvaro Morata was bought. But with a
transfer ban around the corner, should Los Blancos have spent like
Barcelona did in 2014?
Barca's ban was handed out by FIFA for irregularities in the signing
of young players in April of 2014, but put back by a window during
the appeal, allowing the Catalan club to strengthen for Luis Enrique's
debut season. Conscious that they would be unable to register new
footballers for the next year, the Blaugrana brought in Luis Suarez,
Ivan Rakitic, Claudio Bravo, Marc-Andre ter Stegen, Jeremy Mathieu and
more to entirely reshape their squad. And they ended up winning the
treble.
Madrid received a similar sanction earlier this year - along with
Atletico - and like Barca's, it was put back because of the appeal
process. Still no definitive decision has been made, but in theory Real
will be banned from signing players for the next two windows and it
therefore looked like being a busy summer at the Santiago Bernabeu.
But it wasn't. Unwilling to break the transfer record for Paul Pogba,
Madrid stood aside as the midfielder moved to Manchester United
instead. Real did bring back Alvaro Morata from Juventus early in the
summer, while Marco Asensio (signed in 2014) has been given a place in
the first team following his loan spell at Espanyol in 2015-16 and Fabio
Coentrao returns to provide back-up after he spent last term at Monaco.
However, that hardly represents a busy summer - especially by
Madrid's standards. And it means the European champions must stick with
what they have for the foreseeable future - with James Rodriguez and
Isco both staying at the club after their careers at Real had looked in
doubt for weeks, even up until the final days of the transfer window.
James' agent Jorge Mendes told Spanish television on Tuesday night
that the Colombian would be remaining at the Bernabeu, while Isco said
"I'm staying, I'm staying" when quizzed by a reporter at an event on
Wednesday with president Florentino Perez.
At that event, Perez told reporters: "We have already claimed the
UEFA Super Cup and won the first two Liga games. We have a spectacular
squad, impossible to improve, and a coach, Zidane, who has given us many
things - as a player and also now as a coach."
Madrid have monitored both David Alaba and Marco Verratti, but both
players were unavailable this summer. The club also looked at
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang due to the persistent problems suffered by
Karim Benzema and considered Borussia Dortmund's Julian Weigl and
Newcastle's Moussa Sissoko - a deadline day signing for Tottenham - as
back-up for Casemiro.
The Brazilian midfielder has no real replacement at Madrid and Zidane
will hope he stays fit for the whole campaign, although Marcos Llorente
(currently on loan at Alaves) is an option for that position next term.
Barcelona, meanwhile, were busy this summer, signing Samuel
Umtiti and Lucas Digne to boost their defence, bringing back Denis
Suarez and adding Valencia duo Andre Gomes and Paco Alcacer as well as
Ajax goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen following the departure of Claudio
Bravo to Manchester City. The Catalans now have arguably the strongest
squad in their entire history.
For their part, Atletico were also active, bringing in Kevin Gameiro,
Nico Gaitan and Sime Vrsaljko to boost their squad, while they also
have a number of players out on loan (such as Luciano Vietto, Matias
Kranevitter and Rafael Santos Borre) who can come back during their
transfer ban.
So while their two big rivals strengthened this summer, Madrid chose
to stick rather than twist in the hope that Zidane will lead the club to
the promised land - with or without new signings. The Frenchman,
however, is still a relatively inexperienced coach at this level and a
poor performance in 2016-17 could yet make Perez regret the club's lack
of investment this summer. Time will tell.
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