Eat, Sleep and Respect the Ball: Inside Barcelona’s Modern La Masia

Barcelona youth players take on their Espanyol counterparts in the shadow of La Masia 2.0, the latest incarnation of the club’s famed academy. Photograph: Jasper Juinen/Getty Images
Barcelona youth players take on their Espanyol counterparts in the shadow of La Masia 2.0, the latest incarnation of the club’s famed academy. Photograph: Jasper Juinen/Getty Images
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Eat, Sleep and Respect the Ball: Inside Barcelona’s Modern La Masia

Barcelona youth players take on their Espanyol counterparts in the shadow of La Masia 2.0, the latest incarnation of the club’s famed academy. Photograph: Jasper Juinen/Getty Images
Barcelona youth players take on their Espanyol counterparts in the shadow of La Masia 2.0, the latest incarnation of the club’s famed academy. Photograph: Jasper Juinen/Getty Images

The dimly lit, studiously grey lecture room carries the feel of a sixth-form block in a suburban high-school. On the opposite side of the street, about the width of a football pitch away, stands a typical Aldi supermarket, intensifying the acute sense of suburban normality. But this is no conventional school environment.

This is the heart of La Masia 2.0, Barcelona’s modern incarnation of the famous residential farmhouse that helped nurture the finest generation of footballers the club has ever seen. The place where Lionel Messi, Xavi Hernández, Carles Puyol, Andrés Iniesta and the rest of the tiki-taka brigade were schooled in the art of strangling the opposition with relentlessly mesmeric ball-hogging maneuvers.

“It’s not luck but we had a lot of stars at the same time,” explains Marc Carmona, Barcelona’s head of coach education. “The Spain team won three consecutive tournaments between 2008 and 2012 – and it coincided with Barça’s best period in history.”

Sitting in La Masia’s main lecture hall a couple of days after Spain got their chaotic World Cup bid off to a stuttering start with a 3-3 draw against Portugal, Carmona goes on to explain that one of the high points for La Masia, founded in 1979 at the insistence of Johan Cruyff, came in 2010. An astonishing nine La Masia graduates dominated the Spain squad that made history by winning a first World Cup. Two of those players – Xavi and Iniesta – joined another La Masia graduate, a certain diminutive Argentinian, on the Ballon d’Or shortlist the same year.

It was the first and only time all three players on the shortlist have hailed from the same club. Messi won it – his second of five so far – and, remarkably, the club has had at least one player on the final shortlist every year since 2004. “We are working to repeat this period,” says Carmona. “But it’s very difficult.”

This difficulty has become clear in recent years. Just 12 months after La Masia 2.0 opened in 2011, Tito Villanova made history by fielding a starting 11 comprising all La Masia graduates. But since then only Sergio Roberto has established himself in the first team after coming through the ranks.

A little over two years ago, the club introduced La Masia 360, an attempt to widen the net to produce the next wave of superstar players as the game evolves but also with a nod to the legion of players who might not make it to the top. The club now extends the holistic approach to developing its residential players, currently 76 youngsters, to include the 550 or so other players within the academy program across five professional sports: football (male and female), basketball, futsal, handball and roller hockey.

“For about 70 youth players, they live here, sleep here, eat here, study here, train here. They have a lot of attention,” says Carmona. “One day the strategy department decided that if we take care of these 70 young athletes in all ways, why are Barça not giving this same attention to all the youth professional players? So now, we are trying to give the same attention for the non-residents. They don’t live here but we are trying to control their family situation, their study situation too.”

The club’s commitment to its Mes que un club philosophy is clear. The 360 program focuses on the whole child and is upfront about the psycho-social characteristics required to make it at Barça: humility, effort, ambition, respect, teamwork.

“For us behavior is very important. You have to win by respecting the opponent, the referee and the rules of the play,” says Carmona. “But also by respecting our three big treasures in football, the three Ps: possession of the ball, position of the ball and pressing after losing the ball. This is our way to understand football. This is clear from watching any Barcelona game.”

The five-story building – full name La Masia Centre de formacio Oriol Tort – is situated in the heart of the club’s suburban training complex, Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper, about three miles east of Camp Nou. It replaced the famous old farmhouse as the central nervous system of the FC Barcelona behemoth.

The rear end of the ground-floor corridor leads to the restaurant before a door paves the way to an outdoor playground that rams home the focus on learning and play: next to a table-football table stands an oversize table-tennis table, which is oval, carries football pitch markings and lends itself to 2v2 games (table tennis and head tennis) between the players. “It’s just like you see in the public parks of Barcelona,” says Carmona.

Real Madrid’s €100m investment in its academy set-up, not to mention its first team’s recent dominance in Europe, raises the difficult question of whether modern football is leaving Barça’s purism behind. Carmona is quick to defend the clear thread of playing style and philosophy that runs through the age groups at La Masia, from the Under-10s right up to the first team.

“During the season, you can see the training session for the U10, then the U16 then Barça B and you will see the same,” he says. “Different exercises because of the age of the players but the idea of the session, and the kind of exercises, are very similar. You can smell it, you can see it in the session; this is our DNA.

“It is about games in a small space, a lot of rondos, a lot of games with possession, a lot of games 4v4, 5v5, so you can see that the ball is very important. To pass the ball, control the ball, to move with the ball … this is the DNA in football. And the coaches are trying to transmit the understanding at all ages.”

The subject of Real’s ruthlessly destructive victory over Liverpool in May’s Champions League final crops up. Can Barça’s goalposts be moved when considering “the way we win”? “I think sometimes, we maybe need our [Sergio] Ramos too,” Carmona concedes. “ Because Barça in the last five seasons, in four of them [we have been] eliminated in the quarter-final in Europe. So we have to think about, maybe, our way to play is a good option to win the Spanish league – Barça won seven of the last 10 leagues. But maybe not enough to compete in Europe, because opponents have very big players.”

Carmona was the hugely successful head coach of Barcelona’s futsal team before he took on the role of ensuring all the club’s youth coaches are tuned into the Barça DNA. The benefits of futsal – the Fifa-sanctioned version of five a side – have been long espoused by Messi, Xavi and Iniesta among many others. It is clear Barcelona is also trying to succeed by nurturing football’s little brother too. “In futsal you touch the ball more, participate a lot, are in contact with the ball a lot,” Carmona says. “Sometimes in football you can touch the ball once every three minutes. It is a very good practice for football to play futsal.”

Jordi Torras, a former Barcelona and Spain futsal star who is now head of youth futsal coaching at the club, explains how the match-realistic scenarios are crucial given the importance of the tournament to come. “At this stage of the championship we will work more on the strategic aspects and a lot of real situations that you can find with the rival and the match,” he says. “The philosophy is the same as the one requested by the club: we have to win by being an example in everything and that is what makes us different.”

As well the residencies at its training ground, Barcelona’s clear commitment to a professional futsal team is another marker of difference between them and Real. The Madrid club flirted with futsal in the mid-80s but has not had a professional team.

“They [Real Madrid] want the best football club in Europe, they have it,” says Carmona. “Here in Barça we have special feeling with all our pro sections but also with our amateur sections too.

It is our identity. Athletics, volleyball [male and female], basketball for females, wheelchair basketball, ice skating, ice hockey rugby, grass hockey. They are all part of our identity.

“The DNA of Madrid is to win. The DNA of Barça is to play well. But the truth is that we have to win too.”

(The Guardian)



Mbappe's Golden-boy Image Takes A Hit Amid Negative Headlines

Mbappe in action for France last month - AFP
Mbappe in action for France last month - AFP
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Mbappe's Golden-boy Image Takes A Hit Amid Negative Headlines

Mbappe in action for France last month - AFP
Mbappe in action for France last month - AFP

Kylian Mbappe is hoping his recent move to Real Madrid will take his already glittering career on the pitch to new heights, but the French superstar has become embroiled in off-field difficulties in recent months.

In an ideal world, the 25-year-old former Paris Saint-Germain striker would have been able to focus fully on settling in Madrid after he moved to the Spanish capital on a five-year deal during the summer just finished.

Instead, as well as being hampered by fitness problems, Mbappe has been locked in a bitter financial dispute with his old club and is now cited as the suspect in a rape investigation according to reports in Sweden, according to AFP.

Mbappe has dismissed those reports as "fake news" and is hoping to win his battle with PSG over what he claims amounts to 55 million euros ($60m) in unpaid wages and bonuses from last season.

Nevertheless, the negative headlines are a blow to the player's image and remove some of the aura around a young man who has become an icon in his home country and is a global sporting superstar.

When Mbappe emerged as a teenager at Monaco almost a decade ago, he stood out because of his precocious talent but also thanks to his remarkable communication skills.

Rather than being fazed by the media spotlight, Mbappe was clearly at ease in front of the cameras and spoke with the maturity and assurance of someone considerably older.

He was a World Cup winner at 19 and went on to become the all-time top scorer at PSG, the local club of the boy from Bondy in the Paris suburbs.

In March 2023, a few months after scoring a stunning hat-trick in France's World Cup final defeat by Lionel Messi's Argentina, he was named captain of the national team by coach Didier Deschamps.

That seemed a natural choice given his status in the team and in the country in general, but his position as skipper meant the decision to rest him for France's UEFA Nations League matches this month was controversial.

Mbappe had picked up a thigh injury in late September, a minor problem but one that suggested giving him a break would be beneficial in the long run.

"We need to put the player's interests first, without putting him into difficulty," Deschamps said of that decision, referring to Mbappe's relationship with his new club.

But as France's sporting press debated whether Mbappe's temporary absence from the squad was justified or a sign of a lack of commitment to the French cause, the player himself travelled to Stockholm for a short break with members of his entourage.

Swedish newspapers Aftonbladet and Expressen, and public broadcaster SVT, have since reported that he is under investigation for rape, after an alleged incident in a hotel on October 10.

A Swedish prosecutor confirmed on Tuesday that a rape investigation had been opened but did not mention Mbappe's name.

Meanwhile Mbappe, whose career is managed by his mother Fayza Lamari, has taken his financial row with PSG to a French league committee.

He is trying to recover 55 million euros comprised of several months' unpaid wages and a signing-on fee, money PSG claimed he agreed to waive if he departed for free at the end of last season.

Mbappe even intimated on Monday that there was a link between the rape report and the wrangle with his old team, where he spent seven years.

"It's becoming so predictable, on the eve of the hearing, as if by chance," he wrote on X on Monday.

His unhappy divorce from PSG, which saw him left out of the team on numerous occasions in the second half of last season after he announced his intention to leave, surely contributed to a disappointing European Championship with France.

Mbappe suffered a broken nose in France's opening game at Euro 2024 in June and only scored one goal, a penalty in a group-stage draw with Poland, before Les Bleus lost in the semi-finals.

He looked some way short of peak physical form and is taking his time to settle in Madrid, even if he has seven goals in his first 11 appearances.

One recent moment seemed to capture the change in attitude towards Mbappe in his home country, as he was loudly booed by Lille supporters when introduced as a substitute for Real in a Champions League game earlier this month.

Such a welcome for an opposition player may not be unusual, but it contrasted sharply with the acclaim with which he was received around France in the aftermath of the last World Cup.