Luis
Enrique followed Guardiola's achievements but never got the same
credit
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[March 02, 2017]
By Richard Martin
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Luis Enrique's
announcement that he will quit Barcelona at the end of the season
was expected, but the timing - at the end of a news conference after
his side thrashed Sporting Gijon 6-1 - came as a surprise.
In fact, he had first considered not renewing his contract beyond
next summer during pre-season, he said, after a dramatic slide at
the end of the second campaign. Barca had exited the Champions
League and could only claim a league title that had looked to be
sewn up on the final day of the season.
That dip in form, which saw Barca lose three consecutive league
games for the first time in 13 years, was the first sign that the
wheels were starting to come off a spectacular machine that had
rolled to the treble in his first season.
Concern grew when Barca slumped to a 2-1 defeat at home against
newly promoted Alaves after the coach made a string of changes. His
much criticized squad rotation came back to haunt him in a 4-3
defeat at Celta Vigo.
Barca remained in the fight for the league title and on Wednesday
overtook Real Madrid at the top of La Liga, but they have also
failed to convince against the top sides. Their decline culminated
in a 4-0 thrashing at Paris St Germain that left them on the brink
of an early exit in the Champions League.
There was more than a hint of rumbling discontent in the dressing
room. Heavyweights Sergio Busquets and Andres Iniesta publicly
criticized the coach's tactics in Paris, although the coach found an
ally in Gerard Pique.
The coach also looked rattled after the game in a tense exchange
with a Catalan television reporter, who he harangued for not giving
him credit for the team's successes.
While Luis Enrique has long had a prickly relationship with the
media, it was becoming clearer that the stress of a role which had
worn out predecessor Pep Guardiola was finally getting to him.
Barca failed to give a fitting response in their next game against
struggling Leganes, rescuing a 2-1 win with a late penalty converted
by Lionel Messi, which the Argentine chose not to celebrate.
Luis Enrique's uneasy relationship with Messi nearly cost him his
job in January 2015 after the Argentine reacted badly to being left
out against Real Sociedad. In general, he appeared to have little
personal connection with his squad.
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Barcelona's coach Luis Enrique Martinez. REUTERS/Juan Medina
These underlying tensions mean Luis Enrique will not
be remembered with the same reverence as Guardiola, even though he
has delivered a similar trophy haul as his old teammate, who was
seen as the spiritual heir to Johan Cruyff, the godfather of the
modern Barcelona.
President Josep Maria Bartomeu, however, lauded Luis Enrique: "We've
had a super coach in the last three years," he declared. "No one can
doubt he's one of the best coaches Barcelona have had and who has
fit with our ideas."
Sevilla's Jorge Sampaoli and Athletic Bilbao's Ernesto Valverde are
the two main candidates to succeed Luis Enrique, although the
outgoing coach is believed to want his assistant Juan Carlos Unzue
to take over.
Argentine Sampaoli has transformed Sevilla into one of the most
exciting teams to watch in Europe with a dynamic, possession-based
style of play reminiscent of the enthralling football Guardiola
served up. He is seen as the fans' choice, while former Barca player
Valverde is reported to be favored by the board.
Messi's bond with compatriot Sampaoli could be a deciding factor,
however. Whoever Barca do appoint will have his work cut out in
repeating Luis Enrique's achievements, even though the coach never
managed to satisfy everyone at the club.
(Reporting by Richard Martin, editing by Larry King) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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