Lionel Messi's injury comes at an
inopportune time for a struggling Barcelona side looking to regain their form
from a record-breaking 2014-15 season.
VI-Images
By Ian Hawkey FOX Soccer Sep 26, 2015
at 4:02p ET
MADRID --
The silence that fell over Camp Nou at
eight minutes past four on Saturday told its own story. Suddenly, the stadium
was housing tens of thousands of expert doctors and surgeons. These spectators
looked to one another anxiously, pessimistically, craned their necks to look
for signals from the crumpled figure lying on the pitch, surrounded by
colleagues each making their own diagnosis.
"When Leo Messi goes down
and asks to be substituted, you know it's something bad," said Sergio Busquets,
the Barcelona midfielder on the topic that dominated
matchday six of La Liga. "He is not the type to complain." Busquets,
too, turned in a locum medic. "It's not going to be a
matter of one or two weeks that we're
without our main man. It will be longer than that, and of course we will notice
his absence."
A few hours later, a definitive expert
opinion followed a hospital examination of Messi's left knee ligament damage,
sustained in a challenge from Pedro Bigas barely had Barca embarked on what would be a 2-1 win
over Las Palmas. Seven or eight weeks of recuperation will be needed before the
Argentinian can expect return to action. Which puts the important fixture on
Nov. 21 as a tantalizing target. Barcelona face Real Madrid that evening.
Barcelona can win without Messi, and
the attacking partners Barcelona's leading goal-scorer works most effectively
with, Luis Suarez and Neymar, did after all manage 64 goals between
them in 2014-15, a campaign in which Suarez, who scored both the goals on
Saturday, was suspended for the first two months. But the timing of this
injury, and the length of the absence is what troubles the club's strategists.
"It will be a big test for us," said Luis Enrique, the head coach.
"But it can also be a stimulus."
There is never a good time for any team
to be without one of the greatest soccer players in history, never a safe
period for a Barcelona whose game plan so centers around Messi to formulate
different roles for Suarez, Neymar and Andres Iniesta so that Messi's work
and responsibilities are spread around. But this is a bad time. Over the summer
Barcelona signed high-class new players, notably Arda Turan, who will certainly
provide vigor and skill on the right flank. Because of Barcelona's FIFA-imposed
ban, a penalty for having infringed rules on the signing of players under 18
years old, Turan cannot register to play until Jan. 2015.
THE UNTOUCHABLES
Munir El-Haddadi
replaced Messi against Las Palmas, but to ask a player who only turned 20 this
month, and has played only 12 La Liga matches in his career, to cover for a
genius would be fanciful. The sale of Pedro, the Spain international winger, to
Chelsea in August now looks a cause for regret.
Missing Messi for a long stretch is a
relatively rare experience for recent Barcelona coaches. Though he struggled
with regular muscle injuries in his teens, his diligence in conditioning work
as he matured into a leader and emblem of Barcelona has meant long absences
have been quite rare. He did miss 11 matches, across competitions, of the
2013-14 season, the only season since 2007-08 which he has finished without a
major club trophy.
Barcelona dropped points while was
recuperating from a muscle complaint then, in a defeat against Athletic Bilbao,
and in a 0-0 draw with Atletico Madrid, where he made his comeback and played
for 45 minutes. Might a fit Messi for that period have made a difference? Quite
likely. Atletico finished La Liga in first while Barcelona settled for second.
Both clubs had equal points.
Might his long-term absence affect voting for the 2015 Balon d'Or, the World Footballer of the Year prize for which he is favorite? It is possible, although his usual, fierce rival for that award, and the holder, will hope to make greater profit from Messi's low visibility these next few weeks than he did on Saturday. Cristiano Ronaldo squandered chance after goal-scoring chance in Madrid's 0-0 draw at home to a Malaga whose goalkeeper Carlos Kameni had a superb day. Rolando was visibly vexed to draw a blank, Madrid supporters audibly frustrated at points dropped at home. Barcelona fans meanwhile looked at that result as one piece of benign news on an otherwise gloomy day.
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