Can Liverpool Unlock Riddle of the Real Life Oxymoron?

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain is set to join Chelsea from Arsenal for a reported £35 million. Andrew Couldridge / Reuters
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain is set to join Chelsea from Arsenal for a reported £35 million. Andrew Couldridge / Reuters
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Can Liverpool Unlock Riddle of the Real Life Oxymoron?

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain is set to join Chelsea from Arsenal for a reported £35 million. Andrew Couldridge / Reuters
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain is set to join Chelsea from Arsenal for a reported £35 million. Andrew Couldridge / Reuters

At the height of the cold war, the Soviet Union developed a deep institutional suspicion towards denim jeans. Jeans and jean‑related items were seen as an emblem of western‑style decadence, a symbol for the younger generation of intoxicatingly subversive belief in modernism, artistic freedom and comfortable riveted trousers.

There were heavy penalties for those caught up in the trade of blackmarket denim, what the police called “jeans crimes”. But this was a war the authorities always looked like losing. In 1975 prohibition was lifted. The ministry of light industry announced instead that it would start to produce its own approved communist denim, tailored from highest-quality clothing-cardboard and available in a range of superior citizen-fashion styles.

It didn’t work out. Soviet dzhins may have looked like the real thing. But close-up they lacked some vital element of danger and grace, of not falling to pieces in the rain or dyeing your legs blue. Dzhins were ultimately a failure, another front conceded in the ideological struggle, and proof once again that no matter how well-constructed the facsimile, in the end there is no substitute for the real thing.

All of which is a roundabout way of getting on to Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, an authentically talented English footballer whose mid-career doldrums – 24 and there’s so much more – get a bit more absorbing every week. There is a chance Oxlade-Chamberlain might start his first league game for Liverpool on Saturday at home to Huddersfield. Only a small chance, though, given the surplus of roughly similar midfielders in Jürgen Klopp’s squad and the availability of Georginio Wijnaldum after injury.

Plus, of course, there is something else, too, a quality that has followed Oxlade-Chamberlain from Arsenal, that unavoidable sense of category confusion about a player who has every attribute – brains, skill, speed, athleticism, elite academy education – to be a high-functioning elite footballer; apart from the ability to make any really discernible mark so far as a high‑functioning elite footballer.

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Eight years into his senior career the Ox remains the Oxymoron, the most eagerly coveted English midfielder nobody seems to really want in their regular first XI. His progress has remained oddly mixed. Aged 19 he announced himself for Arsenal with a performance in the Champions League against Milan where he ran at a pedigree defence with such craft and poise and skill he has never been able to do it again.

This is a creative, attacking footballer good enough to score a sensational goal against Brazil at the Maracanã, thorough enough to study opponents and other players at home to improve his own tactical fluidity, who still contributed just one Premier League assist between March 2014 and October 2016. A player who seems in outline to be comprised solely of strengths not weaknesses, but who still hasn’t ever quite been able to fit as an inside-forward, wing-back, central playmaker, whatever.

Oxlade-Chamberlain was fast-tracked by Fabio Capello and coveted by Sir Alex Ferguson. He was wanted this summer by Arsenal, Chelsea and Liverpool. He is a genuinely likable man, a team player and model pro, his public presence less like a footballer, more like the friendly junior PE teacher in a BBC children’s drama. And yet this is still a career that has effectively decelerated, failed to thrill, drifted.

There is a theory about the disjunct between the appearance of Oxlade‑Chamberlain and the effect off Oxlade-Chamberlain. The theory goes that he is in effect an elite athlete playing football rather than a “pure” footballer with nothing else in his veins. Oxlade-Chamberlain was a fine junior rugby player and an age-group cricketer good enough to still hold Hampshire district batting records. His old coach reckons he could have made it as a wicketkeeper-batsman, his hands were so good, his hitting so clean.

This is a seriously gifted human being. But at this level he’s a very convincing busker, an all-purpose man‑athlete lacking in nothing but the one thing you really need to be in that elite band, the feeling of oozing football from every clogged and greasy pore.

Compare him with, say, Gabriel Jesus, the wiliest, most football-flavored 20-year-old imaginable. Or Luka Modric, who you’d hardly pick out of a lineup as a professional athlete, but who stinks of football so powerfully it’s probably hard to get in a lift with him, whose every movement is so shot through with uncut footballing resin he seems to define the limits of the game as he glides about, bouncing along behind the ball like its tethered human counterpart.

Italians talk about being furbo showing a kind of base cunning and guile. In Brazilian football lore they have the malandro, the thief, the trickster, the football sprite. Oxlade-Chamberlain, this theory goes, is not a malandro, is not furbo; lacks in some fundamental sense the madness. He is instead a dzhins footballer, a convincing and effective facsimile.

If this seems a sweeping dismissal of man whose entire life has been spent around football, whose dad and granddad were pros, then what is certain is that Oxlade-Chamberlain represents the acme of a certain elite footballing phenomenon, the top-down academy player. He went to a rugby-playing school. He joined Southampton aged seven. Like every other kid of that age he entered the familiar omerta beyond the park and amateur club scene where the only football played is approved football, managed football.

This idea of technically sound players who lack nothing except a little raggedness has become a new strain of anxiety. From producing players with heart but inadequate basic skills, English football now fears it may be raising mannered, high-grade filler. The under-17s are the latest age group with a shot at winning a title. This will be a part the background neuroses over what next, what now? The sense that what we have here is a generation of command-economy athletes, our own convincing factory version of the real thing.

Like most theories about something as muddled and complex as sport, this is probably a load of bunk too. What is certain is Oxlade-Chamberlain, the Oxymoron, still has six years of unspent prime at a place he turned down a higher basic salary to join. How it goes from here will be quietly fascinating, a test of the basic tension between obvious talent and opportunity, that full blue denim air of authenticity, and the reality of making it count.

(The Guardian)



Real Madrid’s Alonso Learns Harsh Lessons as LaLiga Debut Looms

09 July 2025, US, East Rutherford: Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso arrives pictured prior to the start of the FIFA Club World Cup semi final soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid at MetLife Stadium. (dpa)
09 July 2025, US, East Rutherford: Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso arrives pictured prior to the start of the FIFA Club World Cup semi final soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid at MetLife Stadium. (dpa)
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Real Madrid’s Alonso Learns Harsh Lessons as LaLiga Debut Looms

09 July 2025, US, East Rutherford: Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso arrives pictured prior to the start of the FIFA Club World Cup semi final soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid at MetLife Stadium. (dpa)
09 July 2025, US, East Rutherford: Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso arrives pictured prior to the start of the FIFA Club World Cup semi final soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid at MetLife Stadium. (dpa)

The long-awaited arrival of coach Xabi Alonso was cheerfully celebrated by Real Madrid fans in May as the former club great came with high expectations following his trophy-laden stint at Bayer Leverkusen after Carlo Ancelotti headed to Brazil.

But Alonso's honeymoon period came to a jarring halt with a 4-0 thrashing by Paris St Germain in the Club World Cup semi-finals, leaving him scrambling to fix tactical blunders while figuring out how to stop Barcelona's attacking juggernaut ahead of their LaLiga opener at home to Osasuna on August 19.

The new coach had enjoyed a promising start to his tenure, taking his team unbeaten to the semis despite missing striker Kylian Mbappe for most of the tournament due to illness.

But the Spaniard's decision to abandon the five-man defense that had served Real so well until that point in the tournament proved disastrous against PSG's lethal transitions.

The tactical switch - made to accommodate a recovered Mbappe alongside academy sensation Gonzalo up front - left Real totally exposed and taught Alonso a painful lesson less than a month after the 43-year-old was welcomed to Madrid.

Alonso initially impressed by fielding a five-man defense for the first time in over 25 years at Real, evoking memories of Vicente del Bosque's 2000 Champions League-winning side.

The system, featuring three center backs and aggressive wing backs, marked a significant departure from the traditional 4-3-3 formation and appeared to address Real's defensive frailties from a disappointing, trophyless 2024-25 campaign.

Fixing those defensive problems was crucial after Real conceded 16 goals in four consecutive losses to Barca.

Now Alonso must decide whether to revert to the system that worked before the PSG debacle and during his Leverkusen stint, when he guided them to a first Bundesliga title in 2023-24.

He will have new weapons at his disposal, including Trent Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool and 20-year-old Spain center-back Dean Huijsen, who arrived from Bournemouth after Real activated his 50 million pounds ($67.02 million) release clause.

The club also signed Spanish left-back Alvaro Carrera from Benfica for 50 million euros ($58.20 million).

Another conundrum comes in attack, where Mbappe and Vinicius Jr have still to show their true potential playing together.

Academy forward Gonzalo, meanwhile, has gone from unknown to fan favorite during his remarkable Club World Cup showing, potentially displacing established, multi-million euro signings like Rodrygo, Endrick and Brahim Diaz.

Keeping all of his players happy will be a challenge for Alonso, as well as figuring out how to live without England maestro Jude Bellingham, who is expected to miss several weeks after surgery in mid-July on a long-standing shoulder issue.