Bale’s Long Goodbye Leaves Real With a Big Bill and Only Themselves to Blame

 Gareth Bale (right) has played only 100 of a possible 990 minutes for Real Madrid since La Liga resumed and none at all in the final seven matches. Photograph: Soccrates Images/Getty Images
Gareth Bale (right) has played only 100 of a possible 990 minutes for Real Madrid since La Liga resumed and none at all in the final seven matches. Photograph: Soccrates Images/Getty Images
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Bale’s Long Goodbye Leaves Real With a Big Bill and Only Themselves to Blame

 Gareth Bale (right) has played only 100 of a possible 990 minutes for Real Madrid since La Liga resumed and none at all in the final seven matches. Photograph: Soccrates Images/Getty Images
Gareth Bale (right) has played only 100 of a possible 990 minutes for Real Madrid since La Liga resumed and none at all in the final seven matches. Photograph: Soccrates Images/Getty Images

“If Gareth Bale leaves tomorrow, so much the better for everyone.” It is a year almost to the day since Zinedine Zidane said that, judgment delivered in Houston on 21 July 2019, and not much has changed. Except, perhaps, the most important thing of all: the chances of finding a solution to a situation he has learned to live with, even to laugh at, but which suits nobody. Twelve months later Real Madrid are champions and Bale is still there, a little older and a little more stuck. They all are.

As the final games passed and Madrid edged towards the title, Bale found the focus falling on him. Not on the pitch, where he appeared only twice after football’s return, playing 100 minutes of a possible 990 and none in the final seven games; but in the stands where he was easy prey, even more exposed by the emptiness of the stadiums. And empty is an appropriate word for the place in which he finds himself: a four-time European Cup winner, it is sad it should end like this and sadder still for it not to end like this – to carry on this way, quietly slipping, legacy lost.

Against Alavés, cameras closed in on Bale joking with teammates, feigning sleep with his face mask over his eyes. Against Granada, a reporter spotted Bale spotting him, peering through “binoculars” made from a roll of medical tape and his free hand. Gotcha. And against Villarreal, they saw a peripheral figure on the edge of the picture as Madrid celebrated becoming champions, when he was even in the picture. By the final game, he was no longer there. Left out of the squad – a “technical decision”, Zidane said – he was on holiday when Madrid faced Leganés.

Before the Villarreal game, Zidane had been asked: “After all the off-field noise, do you think that it would be better for the dressing room for Bale to leave Madrid this summer?” Somewhere inside, the word “yes” probably formed, but Zidane shot back: “What a question, man.” Bale, he said, was “one of us”. The following night suggested otherwise, the Welshman an awkward, uneasy presence during celebrations. As teammates gave Zidane the bumps he stood back, arms crossed.

Not joining in might have drawn criticism; joining in, big grin, would have felt false. If it looked half-hearted, slightly embarrassed, that’s probably because it was. Throw Zidane in the air? Bale could be forgiven if he would rather chuck Zidane down a well, only forgiving Bale is not really the done thing any more. There is no photo of him with the trophy, and why would there be? The 2019-20 title is his seventh major medal at Madrid, but it didn’t much feel like his.

Less than a month after Zidane said it would be better if Bale went but Madrid blocked the move to Jiangsu Suning, he put him in the team for the opening game at Celta. Bale started six of the first eight, in fact. But, while there hadn’t been some massive bust-up, something was broken and this was not redemption. “I wouldn’t say I’m playing happily,” he said, “but I am playing.” Soon, he wasn’t. He started once in October, November, December and January, twice in February and not at all in March.

In the big games Zidane still turned to him, clinging to the hope of a reaction, an awareness there were still things he could do better than the rest: he started in Seville, against Atlético and in the clásico, as well as away at PSG. He came on against PSG at home and against Manchester City. But after lockdown Bale started once. In total, he made 12 league starts and four sub appearances, played 124 minutes in the Champions League and 53 in the cup, scoring against third-tier Unionistas de Salamanca. His only two league goals date from 1 September.

In the meantime, there was the fallout from the infamous “Wales, Golf, Madrid” banner, which Bale thought funny and others didn’t. That phrase summed up his lack of commitment to Madrid, some said, his clubs a stick with which to beat him. Bale said he had become a scapegoat. There was a lot of noise, including whistles from his own fans – which he couldn’t understand. And yet slowly it fell quiet. When Zidane was asked “about all the noise” recently, his reaction was driven partly by the sense it was artificially created. “Madre mía,” Zidane said, “you’re trying to make a problem: you always ask the same question.”

The Guardian Sport



Emma Raducanu and Leylah Fernandez Reach the Semifinals in Washington

Emma Raducanu of the United Kingdom waves to fans after winning a women's singles match against Maria Sakkari of Greece on day 5 of the Mubadala Citi DC Open 2025 at William H Maria Sakkari of Greece .G. FitzGerald Tennis Center on July 25, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
Emma Raducanu of the United Kingdom waves to fans after winning a women's singles match against Maria Sakkari of Greece on day 5 of the Mubadala Citi DC Open 2025 at William H Maria Sakkari of Greece .G. FitzGerald Tennis Center on July 25, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Emma Raducanu and Leylah Fernandez Reach the Semifinals in Washington

Emma Raducanu of the United Kingdom waves to fans after winning a women's singles match against Maria Sakkari of Greece on day 5 of the Mubadala Citi DC Open 2025 at William H Maria Sakkari of Greece .G. FitzGerald Tennis Center on July 25, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
Emma Raducanu of the United Kingdom waves to fans after winning a women's singles match against Maria Sakkari of Greece on day 5 of the Mubadala Citi DC Open 2025 at William H Maria Sakkari of Greece .G. FitzGerald Tennis Center on July 25, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)

Emma Raducanu reached the semifinals at the DC Open — the biggest tournament where she's made it that far since her surprising 2021 US Open title — by eliminating Maria Sakkari 6-4, 7-5 on Friday.

On a muggy day with the temperature topping 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius), Raducanu took a medical timeout while reeling off the last five games of the match after trailing 5-2 in the second set.

"I would like to say I’m pretty good in the heat, for the most part, but I was really struggling today," said Raducanu, who was 18 when she became the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam singles trophy.

"It was one of the toughest matches, conditions-wise, I have ever played in. ... Those points in the second set, I was getting a bit wobbly. I’m just happy I could close it out, and it was two sets."

Also reaching the semifinals at the hard-court tournament in Washington was Leylah Fernandez, the runner-up to Raducanu at Flushing Meadows four years ago. Fernandez moved on with a 6-4, 7-6 (4) victory over qualifier Taylor Townsend on Thursday.

Next for Fernandez is a matchup against 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina, the highest remaining seed in the field at No. 3. Rybakina was a 6-3, 6-3 winner over No. 5 Magdanela Frech, the player who beat Venus Williams on Thursday night.

Raducanu's semifinal opponent Saturday will be Anna Kalinskaya, who defeated No. 4 Clara Tauson 6-3, 7-5.

In men's action, Ben Shelton made it to the DC Open semifinals for the second consecutive year, getting past Frances Tiafoe 7-6 (2), 6-4 in an all-American quarterfinal at night. Shelton won 90% of his first-serve points and ended the match with his ninth ace, at 146 mph.

The fourth-seeded Shelton, a two-time Grand Slam semifinalist, will face No. 1 seed Taylor Fritz or No. 12 Alejandro Davidovich Fokina on Saturday for a berth in the final.

The other men's semifinal will be No. 7 Alex de Minaur against Corentin Moutet. De Minaur beat No. 14 Brandon Nakashima 6-4, 6-4, and Moutet was a 1-6, 6-4, 6-4 winner over 2021 US Open champion Daniil Medvedev in a match delayed for about an hour late in the third set because of lightning in the area.