In Spain, no club reflected the local area with greater pride and basked in their famous youth system more than FC Barcelona. Barcelona’s famed La Masia academy is often held up as a shining example of how a football club should mould its youngsters into not only fantastic footballers, but also as excellent sportsmen.
This is the academy where a 13-year-old Pep Guardiola came to learn about the game and a certain Lionel Messi came from Argentina to develop into arguably the greatest ever player. The core of Barcelona’s team was of their own making. Whilst the likes of domestic rivals Real Madrid spent millions trying to assemble a team of Galacticos, Barcelona produced a side of home grown superstars.
Being a talented midfielder during his playing days, Guardiola’s prominence came when he was appointed as the manager of his boyhood club Barcelona in the year 2008. His success as Barca boss was owed much to the academy who developed him during his teenage years. Xavi Hernandez, Gerard Pique, Carles Puyol, Andres Iniesta, Sergio Busquets, Pedro Rodriguez, Victor Valdes, etc. were all schooled in La Masia, going on to play a part in not only Barcelona’s subsequent achievements, but also the Spanish national team’s.
The manner in which the La Masia graduates played the game was the key, showing extraordinary telepathic understanding on the pitch that had been honed by their growing up together. Of all the great sides over the years, it was no coincidence that Guardiola’s team revolutionised the way the game was played like nobody else.
Under the management of Guardiola, Barcelona racked up 14 trophies from 2008 comprising of two Champions leagues, three La Liga titles, Two European Supercups, three Spanish Supercups, two Copa Del Reys and two FIFA Club World Cups. As a matter of fact, three La Masia graduates – Messi, Iniesta, Xavi – filled the top three places in the voting for the Ballon D’or in the year 2010.
After the departure of Pep Guardiola, Barcelona has still seen the emergence of several youngsters, with the likes of Munir El-Haddadi, Rafinha, Sergi Roberto, Gerard Deulofeu, Cristian Tello, Marc Bartra, etc. all making it into the first team. But no one went on cement a regular place in the starting line-up and there were doubts starting to come up among some critics as to whether today’s graduates have received too much too soon in the way of financial rewards.
This clearly doesn’t mean that money has not consistently been spent at Camp Nou, even during the golden era of success. Vast sums were splashed for the likes of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Dani Alves, and David Villa from other big clubs. The Barca logic of developing a winning team by making stars of their own was greatly simplified. Big name signings from other clubs were only made to fill the gaps to complete the team.
However, their clarity in developing their own stars waned somewhat over the period of time since Guardiola’s departure as manager in 2012. The departure of Xavi in 2015 was mainly the beginning of changing times at Camp Nou. With a lack of faith in modern La Masia graduates to succeed Xavi in his role, Barca spent money on Ivan Rakitic as an answer to their creative needs.
The signings of Neymar and Luiz Suarez were very expensive financial outlays mostly to accommodate a better playing style with Lionel Messi. In the recent years, they have also signed Samuel Umtiti, Marc-Andre ter Stegen, and Andre Gomes for huge money to enhance their team from other clubs. The signings of Ousmane Dembele and Philippe Coutinho for exorbitant sums during the last year has further diminished their reputation of producing quality La Masia graduates in their first team.
Last season, their match against Celta Vigo contained something of a shock. For the first time in 16 years, Barcelona’s side did not feature a single academy graduate in their line-up.
This summer, the Spanish champions have signed three future stars for their club, with Malcom, Clement Lenglet and Arthur joining for rather high fees.
While it is very much necessary to catch up with the successes of rivals by investing in best talents from around the world for the development of their team, it is also worth valuing the club characteristic for the continuation of Barcelona’s ethos. From the fans’ perspective, anyone would love their club to continue their tradition and become successful with their own stars. Alas, it is a far cry from the times when Guardiola managed an era-defining successful team, a sign that Barcelona’s unique brand of unprecedented club identity is in decline.
SMHellas
235
No club ever has sustained success from their academy. Witness Ajax of the 70's and 90's, Man United's class of 92 and Barca under Pep, occasionally you just get a special group but the next batch for all the high hopes never get the time needed to develop because the pressure is on to keep being successful
kuebilpsz
183
So just because the academy hasn’t produced much talent in the recent years, Barca is now losing its heritage? Thats nonsense... Once in a while you get the “special” batch of players, which hasn’t happened since the mentioned Xavi era. So what is Barca supposed to do... just not sign anyone and pray La Masia produces another group of amazing players every couple years? Barca is only rejuvenating the current squad and preparing for the future. They are in no way paying less attention or putting less effort into La Masia.
TopaZzMouse
118
Teams with only academy players aren’t always the best. I mean look at Chivas (Liga mx team from Mexico) their entire team are full of only Mexican Players but their results have dropped.
Tinuoye2017
111
No team is an island forever. No doubt, Barcelona is a great team. It is normal for team to face challenges. This shouldn't be permanent I believe.
alvinkojo
103
back in the days barca hardly goes to the transfer market and even if they do is for strikers now you can't say that anymore, from goalkeeper to the last man on the bench everyone is imported. Talk of heritage and identity lost on paper everything is intact...... but the reality is that their doing opposite of what they believe in. barca needs to slowdown the rushing behaving immature sorry for my language anyway. this is not the barca we grew up to love
Fcb1351
67
We haven’t lost our identity. Yes, in recent years we’ve spent lots of money on transfers buts that’s predominantly a result of of our board going after the wrong players and the inflated market. This next season I think we’ll begin to see the beginning of a transition to a more “traditional” Barca, which can be seen by the type of players we’ve purchased and the number of youth players in training and in preseason. We’ll likely have a squad without much depth, just like when pep was manager, and rely more on our bench and youth players.
AnnaJoel2020
63
Change is important anyone who refuses it will not progress.Barca have come to realize that the current trend of football you need to spend in order to win trophies and that is good.However ,the should not abandon their tradition but rather adopt other strategies to develop them and blend them with the big signings to make a better team.Long live La masia, long live Barca.
Leieche02
63
Barcelona's la masia isn't only youth form Spain. There are kids from Netherlands like Xavi simmons players from Portugal, Brazil , Belgium etc. La masia is actually a really good youth academy and those youth players have already shown extreme talent and potential. They are the future for Fc Barcelona🔴🔵
Baapu56
60
Congratulations from waking up from your slumber. Barca lost this status almost 5 years ago. How many La Masia Graduates have we seen in last 3 years? You know the answer. But something happened which is kind of a blessing in disguise for La Masia, yes the relegation. The most talented starlets don’t want to play in the 3rd tier, to stop the exodus of these talented kids Barca have no choice but to promote them or atleast give them exposure to the first team. Alena is promoted, cucurella will most likely get a promotion as Digne leaves. Oriol Busquets is surely next in line for promotion and we will probably also see Abel Ruiz promoted once Alcacer is sold. Let’s hope the current management leaves and someone who cares for La Masia comes.
blankie
55
I do not think so actually, fc barcelona is just being smart by taking a step ahead so there future is full of stars, buying young players will have there future as good
yocbdekmpr
52
with the way football is built solely on winning trophies, any club that needs immediate success cannot rely on it academy, those players mentioned in the article was a work that lasted years after years. Nobody will give u that grace now.
Buomnz
39
its normal we have enough cash so let us spend. I understand Barcelona very well, we bought those players because, in an academy maybe no one was meeting the standard of play that the coach wanted
Dhairya_Rawal
29
There are a few reasons here.... First of all, how many players like Xavi, Iniesta and Messi have happened to this very game let alone one single academy??? It's practically impossible to have someone like them every three-four years from the same academy.... They're once in a lifetime.... Secondly, Barca's talents are taken away at a young age by clubs such as Dortmund and Arsenal.... It's as if that your investment has been rewarded to someone else.... And last but not the least, let's accept the fact that this board sucks!!!! Just the way that Barca hijacked Malcom is exactly not what "mes qué un club" means.... It is just one of the numerous mistakes of this board recently and Barca may drift away from being Barca... It's still the best academy and it's first team still has five regular starters from it but it's just drifting away and that pains me!!!
fiycdopuyz
11
What are they talking about, do they want to say the LA Masia graduates are not good enough or it's the inability of the coach and the board directors to trust them? Comparatively, are they trying to say players that they're spending big sum of millions on are better than the following graduates (Marc Batra, Munir,Tiago, Rafinha, Tello, Alena, and the rest)? It is lack of vision and trust. They have already lost their heritage not on the verge.
U r correct in ur points.the directors n coaches r all a mess n fail to trust n see wat these young guys hve.Barca has lost it's credit n not the academic .Directors hve now allowed certain players e.g. messi to influence their plan .the way u see messi involving into transfer issues is alarming choosing certain players club shld sell (dome r graduates from academic)n insisting they buy other players.Puyol xavi n even iniesta had never been involved in transfer issues.U don't expect delefou to come from behind n displace iniesta within two seasons but he shld definitely be given time for hrim to play under the shadow of iniesta so he replaces him once he's weak n resigns.messi was given time as substitute for two years behind dinho which was logical n replaced hon perfectly. The board shhld play its role n I strongly believe the academy still grooms good players