It’s the Sids 2019! The Complete Review of La Liga's 2018-19 Season

Clockwise from top left: Lionel Messi, Iago Aspas, Joaquín, Diego Costa, Zinedine Zidane and Santi Cazorla. Composite: Getty Images
Clockwise from top left: Lionel Messi, Iago Aspas, Joaquín, Diego Costa, Zinedine Zidane and Santi Cazorla. Composite: Getty Images
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It’s the Sids 2019! The Complete Review of La Liga's 2018-19 Season

Clockwise from top left: Lionel Messi, Iago Aspas, Joaquín, Diego Costa, Zinedine Zidane and Santi Cazorla. Composite: Getty Images
Clockwise from top left: Lionel Messi, Iago Aspas, Joaquín, Diego Costa, Zinedine Zidane and Santi Cazorla. Composite: Getty Images

Spain organized the biggest party in European football but didn’t bother turning up. The Champions League final is supposed to be Real Madrid’s place, it’s being held at Atlético’s place, and it’s the place Barcelona were desperate to go to, but none of them will be there on Saturday night. In August, Leo Messi took the mic and vowed to do everything to win that “lovely and longed-for cup”. They were close, but Liverpool scored, Anfield erupted and Rome came rushing back, invading their thoughts. Seventeen days later, Messi admitted it was still on their minds and the following night Barcelona lost the Copa del Rey final, leaving “only” the league title, tossed on the pile.

Barcelona had reached the Champions League semi-final; the others had long gone. Valencia didn’t get out of the group and, in the knockout rounds, Madrid fell first, their season effectively ending in the worst week ever at the Bernabéu: six days, three games, three defeats, three competitions, aggregate score 8-1, and six months to wait for the next meaningful match. Still, at least they got Zinedine Zidane back and all was well. For a few days at least.

Atlético went seven days later, beaten in Turin. Their season was built towards Saturday night but all that was left for any of them was the league. A club from La Liga won’t win the Champions League and this is only the third time in 15 years that a Spanish team won’t win a European trophy.

The league was Barcelona’s again and was always likely to be, Ernesto Valverde’s side finishing 11 points above Atlético, 19 over Madrid – their biggest ever margin over their rivals. “We can’t have a cock-up every game,” Luka Modric said, summing up Madrid’s season. When Marcelo scored against Levante in October, it was Madrid’s first goal in eight hours and one minute and the next week they lost 5-1 to Barcelona at the Camp Nou. Julen Lopetegui, a dead man walking before he’d even walked in, got the sack the next day. All that for this?

There was a brief improvement with Santi Solari, but then came those six days. Beaten in the second league clásico, their title challenge was over, reinforcing Barcelona’s decade of dominance. They’ve won eight of the last 11 leagues, Madrid two. Atlético’s challenge, if it was one, came to an end the moment Diego Costa “shat on” the referee’s “prostitute mother”. There were still a few weeks to go, but it was done. Asked when he’d like to win the league, Ernesto Valverde replied: “What I like is that you can ask that.”

On the final day there was only the final Champions League place, a little European business and one relegation slot to play for, and the latter wasn’t really in doubt: Girona, who lost nine of their last 10, already knew they were gone. Valladolid, the team with the smallest budget, had already climbed to safety along with Levante and Villarreal and only Celta could take Girona’s place in the second division but that was almost impossible. Besides, they had Iago Aspas – the single most important player for any team in La Liga, repeatedly saving Celta from themselves – and he scored twice.

2018-2019 was the season of VAR, week after week spent waiting, watching and wondering as referees stood there, fingers in their ears, while in a room they looked at replays. Or didn’t. It was also the season of the comeback, football fans waking up to find Bobby Ewing in the shower as clubs everywhere acted like the last few months hadn’t happened: At Sevilla Caparrós returned, Monchi returned, and at Madrid Zidane returned, walking back in 284 days after walking out. Over at struggling Villarreal, meanwhile, they really jumped the shark, sacking Luis García after 49 days and replacing him with the coach he had replaced – the same coach they’d sacked just 50 days before. “I know it’s not normal, but Fernando Roig does the opposite of everyone else,” president Fernando Roig said.

At the end, then, there was a familiar, slightly predictable look to the table and to some of the teams. But things hadn’t always looked inevitable and certainly hadn’t seemed uncompetitive, that old trope lazily levelled at the league (even if the concerns are real). Barcelona were beaten by then-bottom Leganés. Rayo, who went down, beat Madrid. Girona, who dropped too, drew at the Camp Nou, knocked Atlético out of the cup at the Wanda and won at the Bernabéu. In October, it was reported that Madrid and Barcelona had not had such a poor start in 17 years. The “bad old days”, El Mundo called it, but everyone else thought it was good. “The best don’t always win, and that’s something to celebrate,” the Leganés manager, Mauricio Pellegrino, said.

Things changed, though. Sevilla led the league early, but then lost at Barcelona. “If we’re in a Champions League place at the end, I’ll be clapping with my ears,” the coach, Pablo Machín, had said but they didn’t get there and he’d already been sacked by then, probably prematurely. Amazingly, Alavés led the league in week 10 but slipped away, which was as natural as it was disappointing. Espanyol had begun up there too, but went from joint top to fifth within 20 minutes in week 12 and started to fall, only to climb back again and take seventh on the final day, players in their pants amid a proper pitch invasion. Betis went to the Camp Nou and tore Barcelona to bits, ending the season winning at the Bernabéu for the second year running, but results had deserted them, fans chanted for Quique Setién to “go now!” and that day he did. Athletic won only one of their first 15 games, but the new coach, Gaizka Garitano, carried them within a point of a European place on the final day, the shot that would have given it to them bouncing off the bar in the 92nd minute.

Their opponents, Sevilla, took sixth instead, but relief was laced with disappointment at having missed out on fourth and the Sevilla Cup. Getafe – the outstanding story of the season, ultimately unable to hold a position which might just have been the achievement of the century – finished fifth, having been in a Champions League place for 23 minutes on the final day. Above them were Valencia, which would be unremarkable enough except that at halfway they’d been four points above relegation and the coach, Marcelino García Toral, thought he was about to get sacked. But they backed him, and here they were again.

Valencia hadn’t finished either. A week later, they defeated Barcelona in the cup final, bringing the Spanish season to an end in Seville, seven days earlier than everyone hoped. It was Valencia’s first trophy in 11 years, back where they’re supposed to be. For their captain, Dani Parejo, 30, it was a first-ever winner’s medal, despite having played at QPR. For Marcelino, 53, it was too – a quarter of a century into his career. “We won!” he cheered, smile engulfing him.

The celebrations went on all night and it felt right. The cup had gone to someone who cared. Someone really, really wanted it. Which is more than can be said for these awards …

Safest ground
The Estadio Vallecas, thanks to a handful of heroic men. Rayo’s first home game of the season was postponed because this crumbling shaking mess of a ground was declared dangerous so work began on making it fit for purpose and one day a video emerged of a bunch of workmen in hi-vis bouncing up and down in the top tier to test everything was OK – all of it caught on camera in footage that screamed opening-scene-of-Casualty at you. The stand didn’t collapse, so that was OK. It also gave us this neat parody.

Best protest
Alavés’s requiem for football, coffin carried round the stands and left alone in an empty end on another Monday night at Mendizorroza.

Best projectiles
It was raining cats and dogs and bears and rabbits and SpongeBobs and Pokemons and dinosaurs and Smurfs and Tellytubbies. At half time in Betis-Eibar, fans threw thousands of cuddly toys on the pitch, gathered up and taken to children’s centers.

Best losing bet
Javier Tebas, the president of the league, gambling $10,000 on Girona-Barcelona getting played in Miami.

Most impressive ability to spectacularly miss the point
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Tebas saying the one-legged Copa del Rey format had failed because Mallorca and Recreativo once got to the final.

Best red card
Franco “Mute One” Vazquez, sent off for talking too much.

Best excuse
Diego Costa: I shat on my prostitute mother, not yours.

Best moment
Thirty-seven-year-old Joaquín, scoring the winner in the Seville derby and declaring he could “leave football a happy man”. Diego Godín scoring the winner against Athletic Bilbao. In the last minute. In the pouring rain. With a diving header. Injured. “I tried to help,” he said. The winner, though, is that guy. Iago Aspas sobbing in the storm.

Best moment that lasted an entire season (and hopefully beyond)
Santi Cazorla has a bit of his forearm grafted on his right ankle, a piece of thigh in its place, part of his calf in his heel, and some rolled-up hamstring for an achilles. His bone went squidgy, his tendon had rotted away, he could have lost his leg, and was told to settle for strolling round the garden with his son, but he didn’t. Six hundred and thirty-six days since his last game, he returned against a team appropriately called Herculés – and he didn’t stop there, applauded at every ground in Spain. Still unemployed, no one convinced he would be back, in July he played at a tiny little municipal ground in Canet-en-Roussillon before 100 people and a brown dog, where the advertising boards announce local companies – brasserie l’Escale, Alliance nautical, the painter and decorator on Boulevard Archimedes – and a bar sells chips and wine; the next time he plays will be in front of 80,000 at the Bernabéu, recalled to the national team four years on.

Best match
Always Watch Betis stopped being a rule to live by, but Often Watch Betis worked: the second Seville derby was a cracking game, as were Betis 3-3 Celta, Barcelona 3-4 Betis, and Betis 1-4 Barcelona, although that belongs in Best Goal. Eibar 4-4 Levante was wild. None were as good a Villarreal 4-4 Barcelona: “We could say a thousand barbaric things,” Vicente Iborra said and even then they’d have only just got started.

Worst match
“Horror was made football at Butarque. En Nesyri scored an own goal with the only shot in the middle of a storm almost as ugly as the game. Absolute nothingness. No football. No chances. No tension. Nothing. An ode to anti-football about as much fun as hugging barbed wire. Eyes bled and the mouths of 4,155 brave souls yawned through a storm of tedium.” AS’s Javier Martin didn’t much enjoy Leganés against Athletic.

Best match report
Sport’s preview of Ontinyent against Teruel, a game that never happened. Ontinyent had gone out of business, but that didn’t stop it packing its piece with stats and grand words declaring how significant this was. No one noticed they’d “lost” the last two games 1-0 without a goalscorer or that kick-off was at 00.00. When people started laughing, the article was quietly taken down. “Oh, sorry! That page doesn’t exist,” the message says. Nor did the game.

Best goal
The season started with the first of many runs from José Luis Morales. Two days later Alex Gallar joined in: you’ve never scored in the first division before, never even played there, and on your debut you go and do this. You could choose any of Leo Messi’s many free-kicks but Rubén Alcaraz’s might even have been better.

Iñaki Williams got faster and faster and faster until he was at one end of San Mamés roaring, scorer of a wonderful goal. His teammate, Aritz Aduriz, scored a penalty that wasn’t just a penalty.

Staying at San Mamés, Pablo Fornals scored from somewhere outside Bilbao. He also did this.

In the second division, Málaga’s Jack Harper scored the goal his manager wanted shown at the club’s academy and Luis Milla scored a corner.

Sidnei went all Messi against Rayo, Aspas bamboozled Huesca as if he was out on the playground and flicked in a backheel on the final day, while Fornals scored a rabona against Huesca. OK, so he didn’t hit it that well, but still: rabona. “Cheeky,” Jose Luis Mendilibar called Inui after he did this against Eibar. Rosales belted in against Real Madrid. And how about this for a one-two?

Watch this Betis goal twice, because the first view doesn’t do the move justice. The assist on this, scored by Etxeita, is something special. So was one from Villarreal, a neat move culminating in a Carlos Bacca backheel that left goalkeeper and defender crashing into each other and Toto Ekambi free to score.

Luis Suárez’s shot against Atlético couldn’t have been more precise and effectively won the league. His best, though, came against Betis– a 90-minute goal of the season competition, an absurd collection of crackers. Including, of course, Messi’s hat-trick as good as the one he got across the city at Sevilla and remembered for the ball gently orbiting into the net to leave Pau wearing a face that said “did you see that?!” and Betis’s fans handing him a standing ovation. Given the reaction, the touch, the silliness of it, it’s hard to look beyond that as the best goal this year even if it might not have been the best that night.

But the winner is Chimy Avila of Huesca. The only question is, which Chimy Avila? This one? Or this? Woof!

Best manager
Gaizka Garitano, Rubi, Mauricio Pellegrino, José Luis Mendilibar, Abelardo, Sergio at Valladolid, and Marcelino finish behind the obvious winner. “Bordalás, I love you!” they chant at the Coliseum, and how could they not? Pepe Bordalás took Getafe from potential relegation from the second division to the gates of the Champions League.

Player of the year
“It’s bloody brilliant that Messi’s here with us,” Valverde said and, well, you don’t really need to say anything else.

(The Guardian)



Liverpool Boss Slot Says Isak in 'Final Stages of Rehab'

Soccer Football -  FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
Soccer Football - FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
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Liverpool Boss Slot Says Isak in 'Final Stages of Rehab'

Soccer Football -  FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
Soccer Football - FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble

Liverpool manager Arne Slot said on Thursday he believes striker Alexander Isak is in the "final stages of rehab" and could return by the end of next month to bolster the Reds' push for Champions League qualification.

The British record signing has been sidelined since mid-December when he fractured a bone in his lower leg and needed ankle surgery following a sliding tackle from Tottenham's Micky van de Ven.

His injury came just as 26-year-old Sweden international Isak, who joined Premier League champions Liverpool for £125 million ($169 million) from top-flight rivals Newcastle in September, was finding his form at Anfield with two goals in six matches.

"Alex has been on the pitch, not with his football boots but with his running shoes for the first time this week," Slot told reporters, according to AFP.

"The next step is doing work with the ball, which every player likes most, then the next step is to come into the group and then it takes a while before you're ready to play.

"It will be some time around there, end of March, start of April, where he is hopefully back with the group. That is not to say you are ready to play, let alone start a game.

"But it's nice that rehab goes well; that's a compliment to him and our medical staff.

"I think we all know the moment you go on the pitch it doesn't take three months but these final stages of rehab can also make it change."

Isak is one of five Liverpool first-team players currently sidelined, with only Jeremie Frimpong close to a return.

The right-back has been out since the end of last month with a hamstring injury but is expected to be available for next weekend's visit of West Ham.

Liverpool have had a rare week without a match ahead of Sunday's trip to Nottingham Forest.

"It is nice and useful as the players we are having, nine out of 10 go to the national team so for seven, eight, nine months they hardly have a time off," said Dutch boss Slot, who insisted he had no need of a rest himself.

"It was nice but I did not really need it. Last season I felt I needed it more in this period of time. I am enjoying the work I do here."

Liverpool, after a slow start to their title defense -- are now sixth and within three points of the top four with 12 games to go.

They next play three of the bottom four clubs as they look to get themselves into a Champions League position.

Premier League leaders Arsenal were left just five points clear of second-placed Manchester City after blowing a two-goal lead in a shock 2-2 draw away to rock-bottom Wolves on Wednesday.

Slot, however, said: "We didn't need yesterday to know how difficult it is to win a Premier League game. What has made the Premier League nicer this season than three, four, five, six years ago is it's more competitive."


Familiar Face Returns to Marseille where Habib Beye Takes Charge

(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
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Familiar Face Returns to Marseille where Habib Beye Takes Charge

(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)

Marseille is looking to reignite its season with a new coach on board.

The nine-time French champion appointed Habib Beye to replace Roberto De Zerbi following a bad patch of form that saw the club exit the Champions League and drop 12 points behind Ligue 1 leader Lens.

Beye, a former Senegal international who played for Marseille, will be in charge of Friday's trip to Brest.

After leading Red Star to promotion to Ligue 2, Beye spent the last year and a half as the Rennes coach. The club sacked Beye this month.

Key matchups Marseille has failed to win its past three league games, badly damaging its title hopes. The results including a 5-0 mauling at PSG have left fans fuming. The club hopes Beye, a disciplinarian advocating ball possession and a strong attacking identity, will produce a jolt.

Beye's hiring "refocuses us on the challenges we still need to tackle between now and the end of the season,” The Associated Press quoted Marseille owner Frank McCourt as saying.

Since McCourt bought Marseille in 2016, the former powerhouse has failed to find any form of stability in a succession of coaches and crises. It hasn’t won the league title since 2010.

PSG abandoned the top spot to Lens after losing to Rennes 3-1 last week. Luis Enrique's team bounced back with a 3-2 win at Monaco in the first leg of their Champions League playoff and hosts last-placed Metz on Saturday. Lens welcomes Monaco the same day.

Third-placed Lyon, on a stunning 13-match winning run, plays at Strasbourg on Sunday.
Players to watch With the World Cup in his country looming, former Arsenal striker Folarin Balogun is hitting form at the right time. The American forward scored twice inside 18 minutes against PSG and has 10 goals and four assists this season.

At PSG, the man in form is Désiré Doué.

After his team quickly fell behind by two goals against Monaco midweek, Doué came to the rescue to turn things around. The France international was relentless and left his mark on the match after coming on as a replacement for Ousmane Dembélé. He first reduced the deficit, played a role in Achraf Hakimi’s equalizer then netted the winner.
Out of action Dembélé is expected to miss PSG's match against Metz because of an injured left calf.

Off the field PSG was sanctioned with the partial closure of the Auteuil stand for two matches and a 10,000 euros ($11,800) fine by the disciplinary committee of the French league following banners displayed and insults directed by supporters during the match against Marseille on Feb. 8. at the Parc des Princes. There were brief discriminatory chants about Marseille at the start of the game and the referee stopped play for about one minute around the 70th.


Verona Prepares its Ancient Arena for the Olympics Closing Ceremony on Sunday

A view of the Arena ahead of the closing ceremony at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Verona, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
A view of the Arena ahead of the closing ceremony at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Verona, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
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Verona Prepares its Ancient Arena for the Olympics Closing Ceremony on Sunday

A view of the Arena ahead of the closing ceremony at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Verona, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
A view of the Arena ahead of the closing ceremony at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Verona, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

A city forever associated with Romeo and Juliet, Verona will host the final act of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics on Sunday inside the ancient Roman Arena, where some 1,500 athletes will celebrate their feats against a backdrop of Italian music and dance.

Acclaimed ballet dancer Roberto Bolle has been rehearsing for the closing ceremony inside the Arena di Verona this week under a veil of secrecy, along with some 350 volunteers, for a spectacle titled “Beauty in Motion," which frames beauty as something inherently dynamic.

“Beauty cannot be fixed in time. This ancient monument is beautiful if it is alive, if it continues to change,” said the ceremony's producer, Alfredo Accatino. “This is what we want to narrate: An Italy that is changing, and also the beauty of movement, the beauty of sport and the beauty of nature."

Other headlining Italian artists include singer Achille Lauro and DJ Gabry Ponte, whose hits could be heard blasting from the Arena during rehearsals this week.

Inside a tent serving as a dressing room, seamstresses put the finishing touches on costumes inspired by the opera world as volunteers prepped for the stage, The Associated Press reported.

“It’s really special to be inside the Arena,” said Matilde Ricchiuto, a student from a local dance school. "Usually, I am there as a spectator and now I get to be a star, I would say. I feel super special.”

The Arena has been a venue for popular entertainment since it was first built in 1 A.D., predating the larger Roman Colosseum by decades. Accatino said the ancient monument will produce some surprises from within its vast tunnels.

“Under the Arena there is a mysterious world that hides everything that has happened. At a certain point, this world will come out," Accatino said, promising “something very beautiful."

The ceremony will open with athletes parading triumphantly through Piazza Bra into the Arena, which once served as a stage for gladiator fights and hunts for exotic beasts.

The closing ceremony stage was inspired by a drop of water, meant to symbolically unite the Olympic mountain venues with the Po River Valley, where Milan and Verona are located, while serving as a reminder that the Winter Games are being reshaped by climate change.

While the opening ceremony was held in Milan, the other host city, Cortina d’Ampezzo, nestled in the Dolomite mountains, was considered too small and remote to host the closing ceremony. Verona, in the same Veneto region as Cortina, was chosen for its unique venue and relatively central location, said Maria Laura Iascone, the local organizing committee's head of ceremonies.

“Only Italians can use such monuments to do special events, so this is very unique, very rare," Iascone said of the Arena.

She promised a more intimate evening than the opening ceremony in Milan's San Siro soccer stadium, with about 12,000 people attending the closing compared with more than 60,000 for the opening.

Iascone said about 1,500 of the nearly 3,000 athletes participating in the most spread-out Winter Games in Olympic history are expected to drive a little over an hour from Milan and between two and four hours from the six mountain venues.

The ceremony will close with the Olympic flame being extinguished. A light show will substitute fireworks, which are not allowed in Verona to protect animals from being disturbed.

The Verona Arena will also be the venue for the Paralympic opening ceremony on March 6. For the ceremonies, the ancient Arena has been retrofitted with new wheelchair ramps and accessible restrooms along with other safety upgrades. The six Paralympic events will be held in Milan and Cortina until March 15.