Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...

For Atletico's Trippier, a goalless Madrid draw ultimately had it all

Written by 
Published in Soccer
Saturday, 28 September 2019 18:27

MADRID -- By the end of this derbi, take my word for it, Kieran Trippier stood in the flash zone of the Wanda Metropolitano and gushed with enthusiasm for what he'd just been through.

The phrase "best derby I've ever played in" was the one he reached for. North London? Spurs vs. Arsenal? What are they?

I'm an optimist, a romantic, and therefore, sure, like everyone else I'd have loved Karim Benzema's wonderful, towering header to have sneaked into the corner of the net or Trippier's searing cross in Saturday's first half to have met the toe of Koke's boot as it was intended to and zipped past Thibaut Courtois.

We love goals, all of us. But I was inspired by this meeting of Madrid's two biggest, noisiest inhabitants.

Trippier has loved the intensity, the tension, the different kinds of questions Spanish football asked him compared to the Premier League.

More -- and typical for someone who's steadfastly set himself to learn Spanish at double-quick time, we shouldn't be totally surprised -- the Bury Beckham has pretty instantly understood the impact of this cross-capital feud.

The welcome for the Atleti bus as it nudged along Avenida Luis Aragones and reached the space-age Wanda Metropolitano was rapturous. Of course.

Vibrant, loyal, defiant, things exploding (fireworks, don't worry) and passionate about their team. As a Scot, I know how inspirational it can be to perpetually feel like the underdog -- that's the Atleti experience when Madrid lord it over them.

But before he went out and dignified this 0-0 draw with daring, athleticism, intelligence and total, total focussed attention, I guess some ghosts danced their way through Trippier's psyche.

It was in exactly this spot that he said goodbye to Tottenham. The Metropolitano was not only the disappointment of his entire playing career, even ahead of losing a World Cup semifinal with England, having put them 1-0 up against Croatia.

To reach Spurs' first European Cup or Champions League final and lose without properly competing, without fully imposing their personality, must have been truly heartbreaking.

Then, in the same part of the deep bowels of this magnificent arena, to admit, as Trippier did, that his season hadn't been up to scratch and that he had to change something, struck me as the mark of a true man.

Honesty, self-assessment and painful admission on a night when most competitors, especially proud ones, must have wanted to go and either hide or drown sorrows until they couldn't swim around the mind.

So, suddenly, he was back at the Metropolitano, not for a debut, but for the biggest test, Juventus included, of his adaptation to La Liga football.

Honestly, while he wasn't the man of the match, I thought Trippier was super.

Athleticism, yes. Diligence, yes. But also terrific application of football intelligence to the extent that he was able to test the rivals in front of him and to blunt Eden Hazard, on Madrid's left, while the Belgian was full of vitality and impishness.

Trippier's key moment came midway through the first half when, set free down the right, he made time stop and looked up in a kind of theatrical way as if to say: "Hey, LADS, I'm in a great position here ... anyone want to take advantage?"

Captain Koke did, but it was typical of the two strikers -- Diego Costa and Joao Felix, each of whom had a night when they certainly didn't want to offend any visiting player (choirboys, let's say) -- that they weren't in the vicinity.

So Koke bursts into the Madrid box, Trippier's centre is what the Oxford English Dictionary would define as "the corridor of uncertainty" and it's fizzing along at laser speed.

- Champions League group stage: All you need to know
- When does the transfer window reopen?

Jan Oblak's save from Benzema might have been the goal-prevention moment of the raucous night, just ahead of his full-length dive to his left to push Toni Kroos' wonderful right-footed volley around the post.

But Courtois' interception of that Trippier centre, a 6-foot-4 man not only at full stretch outward into his six-yard box, but with arm extended like Clark Kent, was simply magnificent.

World Cup third/fourth playoff and Courtois wins it; first Madrid derbi and Courtois tarnishes Trippier's golden moment ...

They'll be back for more. I liked watching an English import look not only as if he was comfortable in his clothes, but utterly enjoying himself.

What added a little lustre to Trippier's night was the fact that he really worked another Belgian in a way that spoiled the chances of this being an ultra-hazardous night for the Colchoneros.

Hazard was superb last week against Sevilla, given a good rest in midweek during the Osasuna win, and I guess the concept of manager Zinedine Zidane was that this would be his star signing's five-star night -- instead, Trippier did enough harrying and fussing around the former Chelsea man that, gradually, he drifted out of the contest. Not a terrible night from Hazard, not anywhere near it. And when he's fit he's going to feast on some of La Liga's defences.

However, Trippier did a double shift of such proportions that he was a constant threat up the pitch, and he never allowed his direct rival to impose himself at the other end. Diego Simeone, even though this project with his English patient is only partially completed, will be extremely happy.

This, you have to see, isn't the Trippier who exited the Metropolitano with his head hanging low, self-castigating and out of form.

A matter of a few months later and he's buzzing that he made this move, buzzing that he's at least the equal of anyone in the Atletico team and, now, certain that his status in the Madrid neighbourhood where he lives has just rocketed.

But it would be impossible to leave this assessment of the derbi without saying two important things.

First, as impressive as Atleti's new right-back was, his place on the podium was looking up to Ghana's Thomas Partey.

The midfielder was superb -- he out-Casemiroed Casemiro.

Quick to press, clever in the tackle and superbly firm, the things which were most to savour about his performance were that he not only passed beautifully between the lines of pressure from Real Madrid, he also made his job look easy. So easy that he was often a thought or three ahead of the rivals buzzing around him.

Easily one of the best games Thomas has played for Atleti.

But, Real Madrid. Anyone who saw them in Paris 10 days ago, giving up the ghost, not chasing the ball, leaving their brilliant, elegant manager, Zidane, complaining that they "didn't put a foot into challenges" wouldn't recognise this XI.

Madrid have now gone out, sequentially, and outcompeted Sevilla in a stadium where they've lost more often this century than any other arena. And won.

Then they dealt, stylishly, with Osasuna thanks to two goals from their Brazilian babies.

Now they've come to the Metropolitano, they've not only matched Atleti but probably are the unluckier side to depart with only a point and, in my humble opinion, they are on the road to a credible La Liga season.

From the humiliation of Paris to this reaction? Seven of the next nine points, three clean sheets, successful team rotations -- crisis, what damn crisis?

Read 418 times

Soccer

Five sentenced after Ajax, Maccabi fan clash

Five sentenced after Ajax, Maccabi fan clash

EmailPrintAn Amsterdam District Court Tuesday sentenced five men to up to six months in prison on Tu...

Pep: City must use struggling Haaland better

Pep: City must use struggling Haaland better

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsManchester City manager Pep Guardiola has defended star striker Erl...

Maresca: Mudryk to 'disconnect' amid drug probe

Maresca: Mudryk to 'disconnect' amid drug probe

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsEnzo Maresca has said Mykhailo Mudryk needs to "disconnect" from Ch...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Doncic nets 27 in 'OK' return, Mavs beat Blazers

Doncic nets 27 in 'OK' return, Mavs beat Blazers

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsDALLAS -- Luka Doncic returned from a two-game absence because of a...

Wolves' Edwards fined again for criticizing officials

Wolves' Edwards fined again for criticizing officials

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsMINNEAPOLIS -- Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards was fine...

Baseball

Trading for a superstar -- and then dealing away an MVP? What to make of Cubs' confusing offseason

Trading for a superstar -- and then dealing away an MVP? What to make of Cubs' confusing offseason

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsCHICAGO -- For consecutive offseasons, the Chicago Cubs have given...

MLB, umpires reach tentative deal for new CBA

MLB, umpires reach tentative deal for new CBA

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsMajor League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Umpires Associa...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated