Spain’s love affair with English football: will it last?
Either Spanish fans are more desperate than ever for a football fix over the holidays, or attitudes towards the English game have changed massively since I moved away three years ago.
I’ve been back in Spain on holiday for the last week or so and I’ve been amazed at how much respect there is for the Premier League. But is it just a brief fling while La Liga is on hold and Spanish players are providing the inspiration at Liverpool, Arsenal and elsewhere? Or will Spanish fans be hopping on Easyjets to visit Anfield and the Emirates for years to come?
When I lived here the Spanish attitude towards English football was one of, well, not quite contempt exactly, but you certainly wouldn’t find anyone looking up to it.
People would sometimes express admiration for the loyalty of the fans — actually cheering on your team when they’re losing and playing badly is an alien concept at the Bernabeu or Camp Nou — but the quality of the football? What quality?
Now everyone you talk to has an opinion about the English league, and most are enthusiastic. El Pais devoted two pages to English football on Sunday, including a long look at whether Spain should follow suit and play over the Christmas period.
Over the weekend there were at least two live games on free-to-air TV. The problem is that one of them was Man City v Liverpool on Sunday. That was the one I watched and as an advert for English football it could hardly have been worse. Liverpool’s plan A was to boot the ball forward to Torres and hope for the best, while Plan B was to boot it out wide on the left to Kewell and see what happened. The best player on the pitch was the Man City defender Richard Dunne.
So here are a couple of questions for fans in Spain and further afield. Is Spain’s love affair one to last, or will passions fade as soon as Cesc Fabregas, Fernando Torres and the like move on? From what I could see the quality of the football in England doesn’t seem to be appreciably better these days, though perhaps the players were just exhausted.
And what about the other big leagues? Should they follow the lead of the Premier League and programme matches through the holidays? If football is as much about entertainment as it is sport these days, surely leaving the Premier League with the spotlight to itself makes zero sense for rival leagues in Spain and Italy.
Kevin Fylan, Valencia
PHOTO: Manchester City’s Nedum Onuoha (R) challenges Liverpool’s Fernando Torres (L) for the ball during their English Premier League soccer match in Manchester, northern England, December 30, 2007. REUTERS/Phil Noble




