‘Clasico’ offers stage for Bale and Neymar to shine

THE 167th La Liga “Clasico” between Barcelona and Real Madrid at the Nou Camp tomorrow could be the ideal stage for Gareth Bale and Neymar to show they are worth a combined price tag of almost €160 million.
The focus will be on Gareth Bale of Real Madrid, pictured, and Barcelona's Neymar during tomorrow's 'Clasico' in the Catalan capital. Picture: GettyThe focus will be on Gareth Bale of Real Madrid, pictured, and Barcelona's Neymar during tomorrow's 'Clasico' in the Catalan capital. Picture: Getty
The focus will be on Gareth Bale of Real Madrid, pictured, and Barcelona's Neymar during tomorrow's 'Clasico' in the Catalan capital. Picture: Getty

Or, as is more likely, one of the most intense rivalries in football and a match watched by hundreds of millions around the world will again showcase the peerless talents of Barca’s Argentine World Player of the Year, Lionel Messi, and Real’s Portugal forward, Cristiano Ronaldo.

Leaders Barca dropped their first points of the campaign with a 0-0 draw at Osasuna last weekend and victory for Real, as well as providing a huge confidence boost, would put them level with their bitter rivals on 25 points from ten games.

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Wales winger Bale replaced Ronaldo as the most expensive player in history when he joined Real from Tottenham Hotspur for a fee of €100m in the close season, while Barca paid some €57m to lure Brazil forward Neymar from Santos.

Bale’s first weeks in the Spanish capital have been disrupted by injury but coach Carlo Ancelotti hinted that the 24-year-old could feature from the start against Barca after coming on as a second-half substitute in Wednesday’s 2-1 Champions League win at home to Juventus. Neymar, 21, has shown glimpses of the brilliance that has served his country so well in recent years – he scored the goal against Atletico Madrid that secured the Spanish Super Cup at the end of August – without really catching fire.

Playing in the Brazilian league has given him a taste of the frenzied nature of a nation’s biggest derbies and he is fully aware of what is at stake tomorrow, beyond the three points.

“I don’t think there is any need to explain what this match is about,” he told Barca’s television channel. “Even though players might never have participated in one, they understand the importance of a game between Barcelona and Real Madrid.

“A ‘Clasico’ is the pinnacle for any player. It’s the game everyone wants to play in and demonstrate their best football. This will be my first and I want to make a great debut, preferably with a victory.”

Real fans, meanwhile, are impatient to see what Bale, the latest in a line of “galactico” signings after players such as Luis Figo, Zinedine Zidane and David Beckham, is capable of.

Fans attending Wednesday’s Juve game applauded him while he warmed up on the touchline and then gave him a rousing ovation when he replaced Karim Benzema in the 67th minute.

Ancelotti has been anxious not to overburden him too early in his Real career and Ronaldo, used to the intense media scrutiny that Bale and his family are now facing, this week urged people to give him time to settle in.

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“Buying a player for that amount of money, it’s a huge sum in the first place, but it also means the lad will have problems because he will never be judged normally,” former Barca player and coach Johan Cruyff told the As sports newspaper.

“It is going to be very tough for him and it’s not fair,” added the Dutchman. “I like him as a player, he has a cool head, but just try to stay calm when all this is happening to you.”

Tomorrow’s match will also give Barca coach Gerardo Martino and Ancelotti their first taste of Spain’s “Clasico”.

Argentine Martino and Italian Ancelotti, both hugely experienced and unlikely to be fazed by the occasion, are still tinkering with squads they inherited from Tito Vilanova and Jose Mourinho in the summer.

Ancelotti’s task has been complicated by the arrivals of a host of new faces along with Bale, including Spain playmaker Isco and midfielder Asier Illarramendi, and Real have been less than convincing in several La Liga outings this term.

Although they won their opening nine matches, one short of the La Liga record held by Real, Barca have struggled to break down defence-minded teams, despite Martino’s attempts to introduce a more direct style of attack.

Whatever happens tomorrow will not necessarily be decisive for the La Liga title race but could have a profound psychological effect on the players.

Neymar, for one, is taking it all in his stride. “I think the nerves are the same in all the games you play,” he told Barca TV. “I know that it’s a very important ‘Clasico’ but the feeling of having butterflies in your stomach is the same as before a normal match.”

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Real hold the upper hand in league games against Barca, with 70 victories to 64 since they first locked horns in 1929.

Under Mourinho last term, they drew 2-2 at the Nou Camp and won 2-1 at the Bernabeu but surrendered their Spanish title to Barca largely because of a stuttering start to the campaign.

If Barca lose, Atletico Madrid, beaten 1-0 at Espanyol last weekend, can go two points clear at the top with a win at home to Real Betis on Sunday.