ZINEDINE ZIDANE HAS angrily attacked claims of a “Real Madrid robbery” in their dramatic and controversial Champions League quarter-final victory over Juventus on Wednesday night.
The Blancos were given a stoppage-time penalty that has divided football fans over whether it was deserved, which Cristiano Ronaldo scored following Gianluigi Buffon’s red card for protesting the decision.
Zidane, whose Madrid side drew Bayern Munich in the next stage of the competition on Friday, thinks some of the vitriolic reaction has been excessive and questioned the motives of those who have.
“I don’t mind if people give their opinions about the penalty,” he told reporters on Saturday afternoon. ”But I’m angry with the robbery accusations.
“People are upset with our achievements. There are people who are anti-Real Madrid.
“But nobody is going to change the history of the biggest club in the world. They can say or write what they want. It’s not normal, all this debate around the penalty. It’s all too much.”
When asked about criticism from Giorgio Chiellini, Gianluigi Buffon, Pep Guardiola and Arturo Vidal, Zidane suggested that a “negative obsession” is distorting the conversation about who deserved a spot in the last four the competition alongside Liverpool, Bayern and Roma.
“Well, everybody can defend their business,” he continued. ”But you can’t talk about a robbery.
“There’s a kind of negative obsession with us. We can’t be the best after the Juventus home game and then be the ones who robbed them.”
Jupp Heynckes’ side now stand between the reigning champions and third successive final, and the French coach is anticipating a tough challenge against this season’s Bundesliga winners.
“Bayern are better this season,” Zidane added. ”This season it will be harder than ever against them.
“James Rodriguez will come with an extra motivation. He’s having a great season. Our chances of knocking out Bayern are 50/50.”
Real Madrid are back in action on Sunday against Malaga in La Liga and return to European football on Wednesday, 25 April with a trip to the Allianz Arena.
What system?
@Brian Treacy: Hoof the ball up the field and hope for the best.
@Deviléire: And then panic and take off your midfield when it’s going wrong
Where do you start?
1. Reduce prices for coaches to obtain UEFA coaching badges in order to increase our “quality” coaches per capita number.
Likelihood: FAI have the prices so high so they make more money. Coaching costs more expensive here compared to other nations.
2. This player development plan, do we know if we have it fully in place?
Likelihood: FAI have real divide worj shooks stakeholders and seem to be doing nothing about it.
3. Use international friendlies to cap young players and play a whole new creative and attacking style of play (e.g. field an U25 team)
Likelihood: Capping promising LOI players would help exposure of suffering LOI but FAI dont care.
4. Realise that we have a domestic league that needs serious resourcing and funding.
Likelihood: “Problem Child”
Raise points about failures .
Likelihood : Peter nagle is an idiot with prepackaged answers on who is to blame & why.
We are a defensive team. We cannot play a passing game because when we do we get exposed. Denmark’s second goal was a perfect example. A good passing move then we lose the ball in a bad position, bang game over. The grumpy old men on RTE think we are a little Brazil. Getting sick of their spoof.
@prop joe: but we can be a passing team if we pass the ball. How in the name of Jesus are people missing this point? We have Premiership midfielders horsing the ball everywhere and anywhere. Are you trying to say that Denmark are that more technically gifted than us? The answer is is they are not. Not at all. The negativity of our ‘gameplan’ is an absolute disgrace. We gave Georgia 70% possession after going one nil up.
@prop joe: kinda need to press to win the ball back so then you can pass.
How about bouncing on Martin?
Qualifying for major tournaments is obviously a major feat but if we have to play the way we play in order to have a sniff of qualifying and then don’t, then I’d prefer we at least try and play ball for the next campaign and if we don’t qualify at least we tried it. I don’t expect we play like Brazil away, but I also don’t expect we play like Gibraltar at home.
@Shane Doherty: nice one Dad
Really need to get a few younger players into the squad, other than O Dowda, there was no one in the squad under 25. I reckon it’ll be the last campaign for a good few of the players, O Shea, Whelan, Hoolahan, Murphy and probably Walters will definitely be thinking of calling it quits at this stage
@COYBIG: the u21s look good
@Jordo: time to get a few of those 21s in and get rid of the back passer brigade. Rice Hourihane and Shaughnessy are better than what’s playing. They actually have a brain. I’d rather we got beaten trying to play than at the crap we are at. We’re a laughing stock
This team isnt for anyone who follows football because this isnt real football or anything that even resembles it.Christ the COYBIG and Irish fan culture is a bit of a cult. I dont know if these lads even follow football. We always fall back on ” the best fans in the world ” tag when we get spanked. The Irish will always be great fans. But the acceptance of this utter rubbish football is becoming a farce. It doesnt have to be this bad- no way. We know we dont have talented players but we have some good ones and everyone of them have a great attitude. Under Mick McCarthy and at various times under other managers we have played football with great results. But i have no idea what this ” hot potato football ” is??The players and the Irish football fan deserves better.
System? Pass it to the other team or hood if out of touch
Sick of Ireland getting manky groups though.. England etc always getting relatively piss easy ones.. I know they’re tier one, but it’s annoying when you see teams like Japan constantly in the cup
@Acedeuce: Japan are a lot better than us
It would appear that neither the author or any of the people commenting actually watched the match. When we tried to pass the ball we gave it away quickly. This directly led to their second goal. We play the way we do because we are not good at playing the way you all seem to want us to play.
It’s actually quite a conundrum. Overall, the quality of the players is average to poor, so out skilling and opponents is going to be unlikely, particularly against better teams. O Neil, for the most part as to combat this, has opted for high levels of concentration, tactical rigidity, a strong work ethic and as compact a system as possible. Last night however he compromised (pressure to win and be seen to be more adventurous perhaps..?) and opted for a less compact system, which ultimately greatly weakened the team. Due to what was at stake, I can’t help but speculate and suggest that the reaction would have been the same regardless of whether; we had lost 0-1 to a fluke, had lost on penalties following a nil all draw, or, as what happened, we were trashed 1-5.