Maletíns [R]

Discussion in 'Spain' started by Kobranzilla, May 3, 2004.

  1. Kobranzilla

    Kobranzilla Member

    Sep 6, 2001
    NY F'in City
    Club:
    FC Barcelona
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    http://football.guardian.co.uk/continental/story/0,8018,1208875,00.html


    Suitcases and wooden spoons: the plot thickens

    It's title-deciding time, and the recriminations are flying thick, fast and generally suitcase-bound. Sid Lowe has seen it all

    Tuesday May 4, 2004
    by Sid Lowe

    The Return of William B. Warrensberg aka Suitcaseman

    In the middle of Oviedo stands a statue of a man in a long overcoat and a trilby, with an umbrella and a mountain of old-fashioned luggage. Officially, it's called The Return of William B. Warrensberg, but everyone knows it's actually Suitcaseman - a man whose suitcases are even great enough to also put in a solo appearance at Madrid's Atocha station, down by the turtles on the concourse.
    Now, some sadsters try to uncover all sorts of metaphorical meaning and artistic intent, but everyone knows that Suitcaseman is, in fact, a tribute to the star of the final weeks of the Spanish football season. Every year, as teams with nothing to play for face teams with rather a lot to play for - or, more to the point, opponents of teams with rather a lot to play for - the infamous maletín (ie suitcase) makes a sneaky appearance or five, despite being banned by the Spanish FA. "They are," moaned AS this weekend, as if the suitcases only ever went against their protégés, "something Madrid have to grin and bear".


    Supplied by an interested third party, the suitcases are there to encourage teams to try a little harder. A suitcase full of jamón serrano here, a few hundred bottles of wine there, and even a consignment of horribly phallic-looking white asparagus. Which makes sense - after all, if anything's going to make, say, Murcia try their best against Valladolid it's a year's supply of a flaccid, tasteless vegetable that's advertised in a truly revolting slide-down-the-throat sort of way.

    Just as often, the suitcases contain the promise of more tangible, cash rewards - rather like an email from the pseudo-son of a late Nigerian dictator. Barcelona's poisoned dwarf ex-president Josep Lluís Nuñez once said of the two successive leagues that Barça won on the last day (thanks to Madrid screwing up at nothing-to-play-for Tenerife): "if I hadn't intervened, I hate to think what would have happened". In 1996-97, then Barça translator José Mourinho claimed that Madrid had paid Herculés to make a bit more of an effort - a Herculean effort, in fact. And in 1979-80 there were payments for the entire Betis squad, including the masseur and the kit man.

    And this weekend brought the latest accusations as Real Madrid, a point behind league leaders Valencia, travelled to La Coruña to play Deportivo.

    The Galicians are playing in the Champions League semi tonight and have already secured fourth, so they weren't expected to make much effort, thus playing into Madrid's hands. Indeed, AS's rabid and increasingly desperate Madridista columnist Tomás Roncero dedicated one particularly pathetic offering, entitled "Depor, this isn't your war", to making sure that exactly that happened. He encouraged Depor not to bust a gut, arguing that their enemies are not Madrid, but Valencia - the team who, "paid off by Barça" (well, obviously), robbed them of the league in the last minute of the 1993-94 season. And, Roncero concluded, hinting heavily: if Depor try against Madrid it means they are cheats.

    So too Valencia. For on Friday morning, AS reported that Depor had been offered a €12,000 per player bonus to beat Madrid. The offer, they said, came from Valencia. And, they added, "next week, [already relegated] Murcia [who play Madrid] will get one too."

    Both sides denied the story. In Valencia, where they are growing rather paranoid about AS (which certainly doesn't mean AS is not out to get them), it was howlingly dismissed as a scandalous bit of wooden spooning. Meanwhile, Depor full-back Lionel Scaloni, who clearly trusts his team-mates as much as this column trusts that late Nigerian dictator's son, claimed: "It's rubbish, unless the lads are hiding something from me. I don't need extra motivation to face Madrid." And especially not to face David Beckham, who grabbed his crotch the last time they met - that's his own crotch in a "disrespectful" gesture, rather than rummaging about in Scaloni's shorts, by the way.

    Besides, while Depor were bound to rest first-teamers, the Riazor crowd was never going to let them give Madrid an easy ride - even if a group of girls did hold up banners saying "Beckham we lav you" and "Beckham, you are a sweet" [sic. and sick]. For, however much Roncero pleads for them to think otherwise, they hate Madrid most.

    And, like in Barcelona, the most hated Madrid man was serial scowler Luis Figo - this time because he had last week's red card overturned by the appeals committee, thus releasing him from a suspension that would have meant missing the match. It was a pretty incredible decision, one that had the Depor fans booing his every touch and Valencia president Jaime Ortí fuming. Again. "It's an abuse of power," he raved, "it's the most unjust thing that I have seen in my life - and I've seen some pretty unjust things!"

    That just added yet more fuel to the fire, as the finger pointing, wild theorising, implausible plot-thickening and mutual suspicion built up like Death on the Nile (only without that woman and her hideous accent, or a Belgian with a silly moustache). "We might as well just give Madrid the bloody league now," cried Valencia captain David Albelda.

    Presumably he's changed his mind now. You see, with Madrid hitting the post tree times, and Zinedine Zidane being sent off for what one genius called "daft twattery", the galácticos were beaten 2-0 in La Coruña. Then, the following night, Valencia beat Betis 2-0 to go four points clear with three games left.

    Madrid had better stuff some suitcases - and fast.
     
  2. Pichi

    Pichi Moderator
    Staff Member

    Dec 17, 1999
    San Jose, CA
    Club:
    Real Betis
    Nat'l Team:
    Spain
    And even playing with reserves Depor still beat Madrid. The game that should be interesting is week 38 Malaga-Betis, although Betis hates Malaga for defeating them years ago when promotions were still played between Primera and Segunda, the Beticos will not need suitcases of money to roll over and lose. Their incentive will be allowing Malaga to win and depending on the Sevilla-Osasuna match result possibly edge out Sevilla for a coveted UEFA slot. What better gift for the Betis fans then to see Sevilla miss out on a UEFA slot!! Betis players have been on vacation since week 1 and only Juanito and Joaquin have any incentive to play well trying for EURO 04 slots on the national team.

    Viva er beti manque lopera!

    Pichi
     
  3. Malaga CF fan

    Malaga CF fan Member

    Apr 19, 2000
    Fairfax, VA
    Club:
    Colorado Rapids
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Now that's a nice thought there Pichi.
     
  4. Malaga CF fan

    Malaga CF fan Member

    Apr 19, 2000
    Fairfax, VA
    Club:
    Colorado Rapids
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    By the way, Madrid has no one to blame but themselves. If you aspire to the title, then you must win the important games when they happen, including winning in El Riazor. Depor was there for the taking, and regardless of whether they all got new BMW's or 30,000 Euros or whatever Valencia may or may not have offered, Madrid's motivation and will should have been stronger. They should have had the talent and the desire to go and take the 3 points from Deportivo, and they didn't.

    All this talk of Maletines is fun and interesting, but in the end, futbol results happen because of the players on the field. It would be much more controversial if Valencia was trying to pay off the refs.

    Quieroz is history though, probably already, but certainly if Madrid do not win any hardware this year.
     

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