COMMENT: The Spaniard had the last word against his former coach by scoring the goal that sent Juventus to the Champions League final
As it turned out, Alvaro Morata’s first-leg goal was only the
appetiser. The big slice of humble pie was served up for Real Madrid at
the Santiago Bernabeu on Wednesday as the striker sent Juventus to the
Champions League final at the expense of the club that let him leave
last summer.
It was by no means an epic Bianconeri display as they played
completely within themselves and lost the advantage of their 2-1 lead
from Turin reasonably early in the proceedings, but Morata was not about
to let Madrid and Carlo Ancelotti off the hook so easily.
Scoring a goal which would prove to be a consolation was not enough for the 22-year-old. He wanted to have the last laugh.
“I don’t understand what happened,” he told Onda Cero earlier this season of his final days in Madrid.
“I went from playing well to being sat on the bench. I wasn’t asking
to be in every starting line-up, but I wanted better treatment. I barely
had any relationship with Ancelotti.”
The Italian coach will now always remember the name Morata for what
he did in the 57th minute of this Champions League semi-final second
leg. When Iker Casillas only punched a wide free-kick as far as Paul
Pogba, the Frenchman returned the ball into the penalty area. There,
Morata was given time and space to hit a bouncing effort beyond the
Spain captain.
It was the goal which eliminated Real Madrid from the competition and
it will also send Ancelotti heading for the job centre once the Blancos
have stumbled to the end of their damp squib of a season.
Twelve months after playing a bit-part in Madrid’s Champions League
triumph, Morata will return to the main event – almost certainly as a
starter – with a hugely worthy Juventus side.
While not altogether convincing during the group stage, with lifeless
losses at Atletico Madrid and Olympiakos threatening to put a stick in
their spokes, Juve have been almost exemplary in the knockouts.
Many belittled their achievements in seeing off Borussia Dortmund and
Monaco, claiming they’d been presented with an easy route through.
After beating Real Madrid, nobody can now say they’ve had things all
their own way.
“I think it’s brilliant for Juventus because we’ve worked for this and now we’re back,” Pavel Nedved told Sky Sports before Wednesday’s second leg.
They are indeed back, and Morata is not the only one to thank for
that. Carlos Tevez’s goals, Andrea Pirlo’s direction, Gianluigi Buffon’s
organisation, Massimiliano Allegri’s flexibility… they are just the
beginning of the reasons for Juve’s success so far.
It is a triumph that will hit Carlo Ancelotti harder than anyone.
“Juventus is a team that I never loved and will never love,” he said
of the Old Lady in his autobiography. “I could only see them as an
enemy.”
Now, more than ever, he has every reason to feel physically sick at the mention of Juventus’ name.
The Bianconeri are heading for Berlin, while Ancelotti is destined for the exit.
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