3 reasons why Real Madrid might struggle next season

Julen Lopetegui Announced As New Real Madrid Manager
Julen Lopetegui doesn't have the requisite expertise to be Real Madrid Manager

#2 The core of the team is ageing

Real Madrid v Juventus - UEFA Champions League Quarter Final Second Leg
Most of Real Madrid's first team have been together for over five seasons

Most of the players in Real Madrid's current first team are world class, and while that is a wonderful position that most teams aim to be in, it is a problem for Real Madrid.

All the success recorded in the last five seasons has been achieved by using a tight core of unchanged players, with almost no addition or subtraction to the starting lineup. No Galactico has been signed since James Rodriguez in 2014, with Zinedine Zidane optimizing performances from his existing group of players.

The starting lineups for both the 2017 and 2018 Champions League final were exactly the same, while players like Bale, Asencio and Lucas Vasquez were quality additions off the bench.

However, like the law of diminishing returns, after so many years of elite performance, there must be a time for a decline. Most of Real Madrid's core players are either approaching or are past the wrong side of thirty. The now-departed Ronaldo is 33, Sergio Ramos is 32, Keylor Navas is 31, Benzema is 30, Modric is 32 while Gareth Bale is 29.

While it might be a tad hasty and rash to dismiss Real Madrid's chances on virtue of the age of its players, the bottom line is that every cycle must come to an end and replace with another.

However, Real Madrid seem to have gotten stuck with this generation, and much like Fiorentino Perez' first Galactico experiment, there is nowhere else to go with these players but down.

Quick Links