Super cool Real Betis turn heat up further on Real Madrid

Zinedine Zidane’s side fail to score for first time in 74 games as poor start to league season goes on

Real Betis striker  Arnaldo Sanabria   heads the ball home past  Real Madrid goalkeeper  Keylor Navas in added time at the end of the La Liga game at the Bernabeu on Wednesday night. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images
Real Betis striker Arnaldo Sanabria heads the ball home past Real Madrid goalkeeper Keylor Navas in added time at the end of the La Liga game at the Bernabeu on Wednesday night. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images

Manchester United couldn’t do it, Manchester City couldn’t do it and Bayern Munich couldn’t do it. Juventus couldn’t do it either. Nor could Borussia Dortmund, Napoli or Sporting Lisbon. The other Sporting, from Gijon, couldn’t do it. They came from Mexico, Japan, Poland and Cyprus and failed too. Barcelona tried four times but they couldn’t do it. Sevilla and Atletico had five goes each. Nope, no good. Along came Valencia, Deportivo and Celta, Osasuna, Espanyol and Villarreal, but they couldn’t do it and nor could Las Palmas, Eibar, Athletic, Cultural, Granada, Malaga, Alaves or Leganes. Real Betis, on the other hand, could. In fact, on Wednesday night they only went and did something even better.

Thirty-five different teams from eight different countries had tried over 73 games and six competitions stretching back almost 18 months and none of them had stopped Real Madrid scoring, but Betis were almost there. There was still time for it to slip away, especially against the team with a thing for agonising late goals and they were nervous but they were near. It was 11.47pm and the scoreboard at the Santiago Bernabeu, like scoreboards everywhere, had stopped on 90 minutes – information denied when it’s most needed. Alongside, it read: Madrid 0-0 Betis. The board went up: five minutes, one last bugle call, a record awaiting, fans screaming at them to pour forward.

Victory over Real Sociedad on Sunday extended Madrid’s run of scoring in consecutive games, equalling the record set by Santos in the 60s. Three days later, with Cristiano Ronaldo returning from a five-match ban, they were set to break it. On Tuesday Marca’s front cover ran a picture of Pele with the headline “O’Rei Madrid”: Madrid the King. Thing is, if you’re going to come for the King you’d better not miss, and Madrid had: Ronaldo had thumped over, Gareth Bale had hit the post with a wonderful flicked volley, and Betis goalkeeper Antonio Adan had flown. Twenty-seven shots Madrid had taken. But, Zinedine Zidane said afterwards, “the ball didn’t want to go in”.

Real Betis coach  Quique Setien celebrates with his players after the win over Real Madrid. Photograph: Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno/Getty Images
Real Betis coach Quique Setien celebrates with his players after the win over Real Madrid. Photograph: Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno/Getty Images

Actually, it did. “We had 26, 27 chances,” Zidane said, while Betis’s manager Quique Setien admitted: “They put the ball into our box 20, 25 times.” There were superb saves too and Setien added: “To win here you know you’ll suffer and you know your goalkeeper has to be spectacular: winning here without suffering is a utopia.” But while goalkeeper Adan needed to be spectacular – and on a couple of occasions he really was – while chances were wasted, the siege rarely looked as incisive as expected and, like Madrid’s draw against Levante, it wasn’t as if there were countless chances. Nor were Betis barricaded in – and proof of that came with what happened next.

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Adan had just made another save, a comfortable one from Borja Mayoral, and the clock was ticking. But he didn’t boot the ball as far as possible and nor did anyone take it to the corner and keep it there. Instead, they played. Before the game, as they gathered in a circle, Betis captain Joaquin Sanchez had appealed for “personality”. “We’re going to defend with the ball,” he said, “and then we’re going to enjoy having it, eh.”

As for the manager Setien, he urged them: “Don’t stress; be calm, especially with the ball. Have faith in what you do. Let’s have it, choose well.” His assistant, Eder Sarabia, paced. “We have to reach the end alive; that’s the key. We’ll have chances for sure.” And so it proved. With 92.11 on the clock, something to cling on to, Adan rolled the ball out and it began.

Javi Garcia carried it forward. It went left, towards the touchline, inside again, across the middle and over to the other side, back to the middle, and round it went. When it came to Cristian Tello, he dashed toward and spread it to Antonio Barragan. There, on the right edge of the area, Betis outnumbered Madrid. Barragan clipped a lovely ball over to Sanabria, moving into space near the far post and he headed down into the net, before racing towards the corner flag and skidding to his knees. High, high above him, fans in green and white went wild. All around the rest of the stadium, Madrid’s supporters turned for the exit; 93.20, the clock said, and Betis were in the lead.

Real Madrid boss Zinedine Zidane reacts after Real Betis score their injury-time goal. Photograph: Juanjo Martin/EPA
Real Madrid boss Zinedine Zidane reacts after Real Betis score their injury-time goal. Photograph: Juanjo Martin/EPA

In a weird sort of way, for all that Madrid sought the goal and a 0-0 draw would have been huge enough for Betis, it had been coming too. They’d had opportunities early, Dani Carvajal clearing one off the line, and even as the game tilted Madrid’s way they protected themselves with possession where they could, and three or four times they had come away cleanly, only to take the wrong decision, misplace a pass, or crash into one-man wall Casemiro. Sometimes, those mistakes put them in trouble and, hearts racing, you could sense fans pleading with them to just put their bloody foot through it. On the touchline, though, the message was different.

“You have to be intelligent to have the ball, keep it, make them run, have some calm in moments of tension. In the last 20 minutes you watch them and you can think: ‘How did you miss?’ You see passes that are relatively easy they don’t make. But after all the effort, the running, you can’t ask them to have the same precision as in the fifth minute,” said Setien. What he could ask them to do was keep trying.

Betis made changes and saw Victor Camarasa, their best player until then, forced off just before half-time. Reading the line-up on the Metro, seeing no Sergio Leon, Joaquin or Andres Guardado, frankly the temptation was to turn back. But they had only gone and done it. Real Betis had become the first team in 74 games to stop Madrid scoring, the record shared, not taken, from Pele’s Santos, and then they’d scored themselves. They had won at the Bernabeu – the first time anyone other than Barcelona or Atletico had beaten Madrid there in six-and-a-half years and the first time Betis had left with a victory for 19. For Setien, it was a third consecutive game against Madrid without defeat. “Is it going to be a long night?” he was asked. “As long as I like,” he smiled.

Cristiano Ronaldo  reacts after  Real Betis score late on at the Bernanbeu. Photograph:  Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno/Getty Images
Cristiano Ronaldo reacts after Real Betis score late on at the Bernanbeu. Photograph: Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno/Getty Images

“It’s only three points but it’s three prestigious points,” said Setien. Three points that will reinforce their identity, too, one that is still being forged. And few coaches have an identity quite so clear cut as his. “In these days when everyone thinks you have to run, fight, work, compete, I ask my players to think,” he added.

For Zidane, there was a lot to think about. This was Madrid’s third home game in the league and they have not won any. With a little more luck they could, and probably should, have won all three; the shot count for the three is up near 80; that scoring run surely shows they have no goalscoring crisis. But Madrid do lack a little fluidity and the chances are not always as clear as the stats suggest. The truth is, they don’t look quite right.

“At home we’re finding it harder to generate football,” Isco admitted. This night was occasionally chaotic and clarity was rare: at one point they had briefly had 12 men on the pitch because Luka Modric didn’t realise he was the one coming off – and not everyone was happy he was – while Lucas Vazquez twice had to ask Zidane where he was supposed to be. As the ball went forward, it was too often just put into the box. Casemiro said it was “hard to understand” but also suggested they had needed to have a bit more “head”. They also need more points – and fast.

It may only be momentary but the damage done is significant. Two draws, against Valencia and Levante, and a defeat against Betis, is their worst start at home in 20 years. Only twice before – in 1969-70 and 1995-96 – have they not won in the opening three games. Worse, it leaves them, in the words of one front cover, “SEVEN POINTS!” behind Barcelona already. It wasn’t supposed to be like that, but it’s like that and that’s the way it is. “That’s football: you have to accept it,” Zidane said. “Maybe last year we won some games we didn’t deserve to: now it’s the other way around.” He also reminded everyone there’s a word he likes even if everyone else doesn’t, one that sums him up: tranquillity.

“Should you be worried?” he was asked. “No, I don’t think so,” he replied.

(Guardian service)