Tuesday, August 20, 2019

The Weekly Take, Issue 76: A One-Season Wonder?

One of the biggest surprise packages in European club football last season was Getafe.

Last season, the club based in central Spain set a club record by finishing fifth in La Liga, narrowly missing out on a first-ever Champions League spot and ending the season ahead of more established teams such as Athletic Bilbao, Real Sociedad, and Sevilla, among others. They also reached the quarterfinals of the Copa del Rey.

However, they have started their current La Liga season with a loss. In their opening league fixture, Getafe lost 1-0 to Atlético Madrid. Álvaro Morata scored the only goal of the game to give Atlético the victory.

This match was expected to be the highlight of the matchday with last season's second- and fifth-placed league finishers going head-to-head. As it turned out, though, Getafe were somewhat fortunate to lose by just one goal. They failed to register even one shot on target, completed two passes for every three of Atlético's, and had far less possession than did Atlético.

Although this was the first game of the season, the question now hangs over Getafe's heads: are they a "one-season wonder"?

The history of European club football is rife with examples of teams which enjoyed one amazing season, only for it all to come crashing down the very next.

The textbook example of this is (yes, you've guessed it already) the Leicester City team of 2015-16.

Having finished 14th in the Premier League the season before, nobody could have foreseen what was to come from the Foxes. Led by the likes of Riyad Mahrez, Jamie Vardy, Kasper Schmeichel, and N'Golo Kanté, the club took advantage of slumps suffered and transitional periods undergone by virtually every single one of England's leading clubs to defy the odds and win the league for the first time in their history.

Before the next season began, Kanté was sold to Chelsea, and this proved to be the move that ultimately ruined this Leicester team. Apart from Kanté, the team understandably chose to run it back with virtually the same group of players. The only bright spot of an otherwise dismal season was a Champions League quarterfinal run - they finished 12th in the league and were knocked out early in both domestic cups.

Another example of this phenomenon was Wolfsburg.

In the 2008-09 season, the Lower Saxony club recorded a remarkable upset, edging out Bayern Munich to clinch one of the most hard-fought Bundesliga crowns ever. At the time, it truly seemed as though the sky was the limit for Die Wölfe after winning the league for the first time ever.

The next season, however, the club only finished eighth in the league and were knocked out of the Champions League in the group stage despite not making any major changes to the team. Head coach Armin Veh was fired during the season; he was replaced by Lorenz-Günther Köstner. The only positive for Wolfsburg that season lay in the fact that rising star Edin Džeko topped the Bundesliga's goalscoring leaderboard. The Bosnian finished the 2009-10 campaign with 22 league goals.

One of the more dramatic one-season wonders was Real Sociedad.

In the 2002-03 La Liga season, a somewhat ragtag bunch of players including Nihat Kahveci, Sander Westerveld, Darko Kovačević, and future all-time great Xabi Alonso took the Basque club to second place in the league, the club's best league finish in 15 years.

The next season could not have been more different.

The club slumped to 15th in the league, only avoiding relegation by five points. They were knocked out in the Champions League's round of 16 by Lyon and the Copa del Rey's round of 32 by Alavés. Since then, they have never even been close to replicating the success of that 2002-03 season.

Coming back to Getafe, it is imperative that they do not become complacent and let the success of last season go to their heads. Their performances last season impressed many across Spain and beyond, and at the same time highlighted the excellent coaching of José Bordalás.

The season is still new, so there is ample time for Getafe to bounce back and prove that last season was not a one-off. Time will tell if they establish themselves as one of Spain's leading clubs or if they just happened to catch "lightning in a bottle" for one season.

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