Gareth Bale's Madrid Exit Is Marked by Bitterness, Resentment and Relief

 The relationship between Gareth Bale and Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane has been ‘non-existent for a long time’. Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters
The relationship between Gareth Bale and Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane has been ‘non-existent for a long time’. Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters
TT

Gareth Bale's Madrid Exit Is Marked by Bitterness, Resentment and Relief

 The relationship between Gareth Bale and Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane has been ‘non-existent for a long time’. Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters
The relationship between Gareth Bale and Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane has been ‘non-existent for a long time’. Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters

The saddest thing about Gareth Bale’s departure from Real Madrid is that no one is really sad at all. Instead, there is anger and disappointment but mostly a kind of weary relief, a release. He’s gone? Good, we can all get on with our lives. And no one more so than him: maybe the Welshman can play a bit of football again, and maybe he’ll be brilliant too, just not at the Bernabéu where it has been effectively over for some time. Now at least, now at last, it is actually over – four European Cups, two league titles and more than a hundred goals later.

Which, when you put it like that ...

In the Champions League final in Kiev in 2018, Bale came on as a sub and produced an absurd overhead kick before scoring a second that clinched his and Madrid’s fourth Champions League in five years, a run unmatched in 50 years. All spring, though, he had watched sadly from the sideline, affected and unable to understand why he wasn’t playing. So, another medal around his neck, still on the pitch, he said he was considering leaving. It sounded like a threat then, and it wasn’t welcome; but over the past year or more, it would have been received as a promise.

Had he gone then, it would have been some way to bid farewell, status secured. Two years on, there is barely a goodbye, better days disappearing into the distance. Last year was a season too far, maybe even two, and the determination to avoid a third is written into the contract that takes Bale back to Tottenham – those clauses as eloquent a comment as there is. Last summer, Madrid reneged on a deal to China, thinking they could get a fee only to see the whole thing collapse. “If he goes tomorrow, so much the better,” Zinedine Zidane had said. They must wish he had; if only they had accepted. Now, it looks like they are effectively paying €17m a year for him to go.

Something had to give, someone did: in the end it was Madrid. It might at times have been hard to understand Bale’s own unwillingness to lose out financially in return for some football but with this deal he doesn’t have to. For him, it is the perfect move; for Madrid it’s not a great solution, but it’s something. At last an unhappy relationship is resolved. Bale threatened to stay, although he too wanted to leave. While his camp hasn’t been prepared to back down economically, they sought an exit which they eventually found at Spurs. For Madrid there’s a saving and they have avoided being stuck for another season, one problem fewer.

That it has come to this. It didn’t need to. Look at the stats, the highlights, and Bale has been a success, but there is no lament at his leaving, no talk of him being a legend. Instead there is bitterness, resentment, an expression of how broken it had all become, a desire only to draw a line under all this. “Bye, Bale”, said the cover of AS, flatly. “Bale cost €101m and he has left behind a small collection of key goals, a long medical history and more off-field controversies than Madrid would have liked,” it ran inside, “Every minute Gareth has played cost Madrid €23,800.”

That “small collection of key goals” includes three in the European Cup final, two of them the winner, plus a penalty in a third. It included perhaps the best European Cup final goal in history. It includes maybe the best Copa del Rey final goal ever, too. There have been clásico strikes and 105 goals and 68 assists in 251 games. The controversies basically amount to liking golf, not going out late and barely speaking Spanish, hardly heinous crimes. And as for the money, it will cost them considerably more than €23,800 for him not to play.

On the face of it, then, that is an absurd judgment but few are prepared to indulge him any more. Even those defending him, insisting he was good or outstanding, want this over now. No one doubts this had to happen and there can be no real surprise that supporters are virtually unanimous in being pleased to see him leave or unprepared to protect him, nor leap to his defence. This end seems inevitable now, but it was avoidable once; it’s just that no one seemed particularly interested in avoiding it, little done to protect his legacy. There is no enthusiasm for Bale and no enthusiasm from him either. The last few months have been as empty as the stadiums in which he sat alone.

“Zidane gets what he wants”, said the headline on the front of Marca on Thursday morning. His relationship with Bale has been non-existent for a long time, and he resisted attempts from the club to fight for a reconciliation. He did not see in Bale the commitment he claimed he wanted, nor the performances that would have forced his hand. Nor was he prepared to offer many opportunities to do so. At times Bale saw intransigence there, coldness, maybe even a touch of vindictiveness.

After Kiev, Bale did not leave but Zidane and Ronaldo did. Zidane’s return was bad news, Bale knew. In the meantime, the months Zidane was away, he hadn’t made himself untouchable. He did not step into Ronaldo’s boots in 2018-19, perhaps shouldering a lot of the public blame for a collective collapse and feeling like a scapegoat. Then, having tried to leave but found himself still there, seeing the doors close on him, the next season was even worse. He hardly stepped on to the pitch by the back end of 2019-20.

Even when he was playing at the start of last season, he admitted he wasn’t doing so happily. Slowly, steadily he slipped from the team. From everything, in fact. By the end, he wasn’t even traveling, by request: why bother when there was no chance of getting on the pitch? He disengaged, didn’t want to know, and didn’t feel part of it. He just wanted to get through it, but there was also a defiance now: against the manager, the president, everyone. He started just one game after lockdown. When he did play there was a sense that he wasn’t really there.

“Wales. Golf. Madrid” was a joke but it expressed something palpable and anger followed, many fans feeling insulted, when they bothered at all. They see no reason why they should be sad that he is going or, for now, grateful that he came in the first place. Maybe one day. But even if there is recognition then, it is unlikely that there will be warmth.

London is different, a chance to start again. The blunt truth is that he had become an irrelevance here; on Tottenham High Road, it could hardly be any more different. From indifference, there is excitement now. An obsession for Daniel Levy, Spurs are set to re-sign maybe the best footballer they have had in 20 years, although inactivity means it is hard to judge if he is still at that level.

The reason for the inactivity and the explanation for the performances when he plays invites optimism, though. When he appeared, it was within a context which is no longer the case, one from which he is released with a point to prove, a place to do so. There is a mission where before there was none, and he is in extraordinary shape to take it on: there is no belly, no let-up, and there can be no recriminations about his work, even if he was denied the chance to demonstrate that. He now has a manager who says he wants him and fans who could not be fonder of him. He will have minutes too, the chance to show he hasn’t forgotten; that he is still a footballer, and a bloody good one: the kind that goes to Real Madrid.

Even last year there was a hint that Zidane saw something in him that the other players didn’t have, starting him at Sevilla, against Atlético and in the clásico. There were moments, reminders of his talent but they were few and by the end the man who was once the most expensive footballer in the world, the player president Florentino Pérez insisted was a future Ballon d’Or winner, and who was projected as their leader post-Ronaldo, finished his final season with just one complete Champions League game and having played less than 30% of Madrid’s minutes in La Liga. He has not scored a league goal in a year now.

As the final, sad days slipped away, he sat in the stands and smiled when the cameras focused on him because there was nothing else he could do. It’s not like he could play any more. The last time he set foot on the pitch dressed in white was at the club’s empty training ground, a reluctant figure hanging back during celebrations of a league title which neither he nor anyone else felt was his. He had checked out long ago.

(The Guardian)



Saudi PIF and ATP Launch Program to Support Rising Talent

The program is aimed at supporting rising talent and widening opportunities for players from the Global South. Photo: PIF
The program is aimed at supporting rising talent and widening opportunities for players from the Global South. Photo: PIF
TT

Saudi PIF and ATP Launch Program to Support Rising Talent

The program is aimed at supporting rising talent and widening opportunities for players from the Global South. Photo: PIF
The program is aimed at supporting rising talent and widening opportunities for players from the Global South. Photo: PIF

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) and the ATP launched the ATP Next Gen Accelerator on Thursday, a program aimed at supporting rising talent and widening opportunities for players from the Global South as they seek to break onto the ATP Tour.

Eligible players will gain access to ATP Tennis IQ Powered by PIF, ⁠an integrated performance technology ⁠platform, along with medical support, structured education and enhanced promotion across ATP platforms.

The initiative seeks to level the playing field for emerging players and provide greater stability ⁠for young professionals.

The launch aligns with PIF’s 2026–2030 strategy, under which the fund plans to focus investment across six key themes as it looks to diversify Saudi Arabia’s economy beyond oil.


Inspired by Nadal, Ruud Returns for Madrid Defense

Casper Ruud of Norway in action during his match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the ATP Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in Roquebrune Cap Martin, France, 09 April 2026.  EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER
Casper Ruud of Norway in action during his match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the ATP Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in Roquebrune Cap Martin, France, 09 April 2026. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER
TT

Inspired by Nadal, Ruud Returns for Madrid Defense

Casper Ruud of Norway in action during his match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the ATP Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in Roquebrune Cap Martin, France, 09 April 2026.  EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER
Casper Ruud of Norway in action during his match against Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada at the ATP Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in Roquebrune Cap Martin, France, 09 April 2026. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER

Casper Ruud hoped his short training stint at Rafa Nadal’s academy in Mallorca would reignite his season as the 27-year-old returns from an injury to defend his Madrid Open title this week.

Ruud, who lifted his maiden Masters 1000 title in the Spanish capital last year, sustained a leg injury and was forced to retire from his third-round match at the Monte Carlo Masters against Felix Auger-Aliassime earlier this month.

The Norwegian then ramped up his comeback under the close watch of ⁠22-times Grand Slam ⁠champion Nadal.

"I'm happy to say I'm fully recovered,” Reuters quoted Ruud as saying in Madrid.

"I was a bit worried at first, I thought Madrid would be tough. But I've had good days of recovery. I spent a week in Mallorca, training at Rafa's academy and ⁠working on fitness off the court. I'm really pleased to be here, ready to compete again."

Ruud said he was inspired by the now-retired Nadal’s determination during a glittering playing career that came to an end in 2024.

“If there's one thing you can learn from him, it's determination,” Ruud added.

“He never gave up, and he was able to win many matches without being at his best because he was ⁠so well ⁠prepared physically and mentally.

"There are so many things you can learn from Rafa. This time, we didn't spend much time together on court. He encouraged me to keep going and told me I have plenty to fight for in the coming weeks."

Ruud begins his Madrid campaign against Jaume Munar or Alexander Shevchenko in the second round.

The twice French Open runner-up is eyeing a strong run in the weeks leading up to Roland Garros, which begins on May 24.


Leipzig and Union's Bundesliga Clash Shows Changing Face of Football

Players of RB Leipzig celebrate with their supporters after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Eintracht Frankfurt and RB Leipzig in Frankfurt, Germany, 18 April 2026. EPA/CHRISTOPHER NEUNDORF
Players of RB Leipzig celebrate with their supporters after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Eintracht Frankfurt and RB Leipzig in Frankfurt, Germany, 18 April 2026. EPA/CHRISTOPHER NEUNDORF
TT

Leipzig and Union's Bundesliga Clash Shows Changing Face of Football

Players of RB Leipzig celebrate with their supporters after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Eintracht Frankfurt and RB Leipzig in Frankfurt, Germany, 18 April 2026. EPA/CHRISTOPHER NEUNDORF
Players of RB Leipzig celebrate with their supporters after winning the German Bundesliga soccer match between Eintracht Frankfurt and RB Leipzig in Frankfurt, Germany, 18 April 2026. EPA/CHRISTOPHER NEUNDORF

RB Leipzig's home Bundesliga clash with Union Berlin on Friday has the two sides chasing different season goals, while showing the changing face of the game.

Third-placed Leipzig can take a massive step towards returning to the Champions League with victory, after missing Europe for the first time this season.

For Union, victory would send the Berliners nine points clear of the relegation playoff spot with three matchdays remaining, all but ensuring they beat the drop for another season.

Coached by Marie-Louise Eta, the first woman to coach a men's side in a major European league, Union face RB Leipzig, whose CEO Tatjana Haenni is the first female club boss in German football history.

The only two top-flight clubs situated in the former East Germany, Leipzig and Union share few other similarities but the hirings reflect a focus on merit and competence, with both Eta and Haenni considered right for the job.

Henni, a former Swiss international with 23 caps who took over the club on January 1, told AFP and other media on Tuesday that Eta's appointment reflected where football -- and society -- were at.

"It's the most popular sport on the planet. It's about quality and it's about the right people at the right place," she said.

"It's a cultural shift which has to happen and it is happening. With me being here and Marie-Louise being the head coach at Union Berlin, it's just happening.

"It's about quality, expertise, trusting people and having the right mindset."

Eta's appointment captured global headlines and the 34-year-old recognised her pioneering role but seemed much more comfortable talking about the game itself.

"It creates a responsibility for me, whether I like it or not," Eta told Germany's Die Zeit on Wednesday.

"My primary goal was never to strengthen the role of women. I have always wanted to convince through performance. I want to be seen as a football coach."

Bayern Munich wrapped up the title last week but there's still plenty to play for at the other end of the table.

Wolfsburg's win over Union last week kept their hopes of avoiding a first relegation alive. Still second last, the victory took Wolfsburg two points behind St Pauli, who are on 26 points in the relegation playoff spot and play at last-placed Heidenheim on Saturday.

Wolfsburg face Borussia Moenchengladbach who are one of four teams locked on 31 points.

One to watch: Jackson Irvine (St Pauli)

Already a cult hero in Hamburg since arriving in 2021, St Pauli captain Jackson Irvine has been a key figure in the club's relegation fight.

Since the Australian reclaimed the captain's armband in February, St Pauli have won three matches -- as many as they had won all year until then -- and only lost three of nine games with him on the pitch.

St Pauli striker Abdoulie Ceesay praised Irvine's leadership in a media roundtable on Tuesday.
"He's a very good leader. He's always there to push us. Sometimes you think he's upset with you and he screams at you, telling you bad words. But afterwards he'll tell you he's doing it to help you, to make you better.

"He's there pushing us every single day to fight for everything and to stay in this league."

RB Leipzig's home Bundesliga clash with Union Berlin on Friday has the two sides chasing different season goals, while showing the changing face of the game.

Third-placed Leipzig can take a massive step towards returning to the Champions League with victory, after missing Europe for the first time this season.

For Union, victory would send the Berliners nine points clear of the relegation playoff spot with three matchdays remaining, all but ensuring they beat the drop for another season.
Coached by Marie-Louise Eta, the first woman to coach a men's side in a major European league, Union face RB Leipzig, whose CEO Tatjana Haenni is the first female club boss in German football history.

The only two top-flight clubs situated in the former East Germany, Leipzig and Union share few other similarities but the hirings reflect a focus on merit and competence, with both Eta and Haenni considered right for the job.

Henni, a former Swiss international with 23 caps who took over the club on January 1, told AFP and other media on Tuesday that Eta's appointment reflected where football -- and society -- were at.

"It's the most popular sport on the planet. It's about quality and it's about the right people at the right place," she said.

"It's a cultural shift which has to happen and it is happening. With me being here and Marie-Louise being the head coach at Union Berlin, it's just happening.

"It's about quality, expertise, trusting people and having the right mindset."

Eta's appointment captured global headlines and the 34-year-old recognised her pioneering role but seemed much more comfortable talking about the game itself.

"It creates a responsibility for me, whether I like it or not," Eta told Germany's Die Zeit on Wednesday.

"My primary goal was never to strengthen the role of women. I have always wanted to convince through performance. I want to be seen as a football coach."

Bayern Munich wrapped up the title last week but there's still plenty to play for at the other end of the table.

Wolfsburg's win over Union last week kept their hopes of avoiding a first relegation alive. Still second last, the victory took Wolfsburg two points behind St Pauli, who are on 26 points in the relegation playoff spot and play at last-placed Heidenheim on Saturday.

Wolfsburg face Borussia Moenchengladbach who are one of four teams locked on 31 points.

One to watch: Jackson Irvine (St Pauli)

Already a cult hero in Hamburg since arriving in 2021, St Pauli captain Jackson Irvine has been a key figure in the club's relegation fight.

Since the Australian reclaimed the captain's armband in February, St Pauli have won three matches -- as many as they had won all year until then -- and only lost three of nine games with him on the pitch.

St Pauli striker Abdoulie Ceesay praised Irvine's leadership in a media roundtable on Tuesday.

"He's a very good leader. He's always there to push us. Sometimes you think he's upset with you and he screams at you, telling you bad words. But afterwards he'll tell you he's doing it to help you, to make you better.

"He's there pushing us every single day to fight for everything and to stay in this league."