The second coming of Gareth Bale was not meant to be like this.
He was supposed to be the final piece in a glorious attacking trident at Spurs who would light up the Premier League and take us all back a decade to when he terrorised Inter Milan and became the best player in England.
This was supposed to be a triumphant homecoming after he had conquered the world with Real Madrid.
Except it hasn't turned out like that. The exuberant cry of 'Taxi for Maicon' summed up the Welshman's brilliance once but it is a distant memory. 'Taxi for Bale' seems more appropriate, sadly. A taxi all the way back to Madrid.
The Spanish giants were cast as ungrateful wretches for their classless treatment of him but it is hard to argue now that their judgment was wrong.
Bale is one of the greatest players these islands have ever produced, certainly one of the most decorated in terms of the Champions League medals he has won and nothing will change that but there is sadness about seeing him sitting in the stands at Spurs, adrift in Jose Mourinho's wide sea of joylessness, wearing that faintly bemused expression that has become familiar since he fell from grace at Madrid.
It has got to the point where Bale only plays either when Spurs are desperate or the opposition is not really up to much.
He was intended as a luxury item but Mourinho doesn't do luxury items so he has shoved him to the back of the shelf with the remaindered goods.
We may not be far from the moment where Bale stands on the pitch after an international with grinning team-mates and a sign that says: 'Wales, Golf, Spurs: in that order.'
Bale's your go-to-guy for Ludogorets and LASK Linz and he's good for a half-hour against Marine in the FA Cup but when the big games come around he tends to spend most of the time as a spectator.
Mourinho threw him in against Brighton last week when Harry Kane was out with injury and it didn't work. Bale lasted an hour in a poor team performance. Then he was substituted.
Maybe he'll get a chance against West Brom on Sunday lunchtime. West Brom might fit the profile of teams Bale is trusted to play against: struggling near the bottom of the table with a defence that has shipped 52 goals, more than anyone in the top four divisions. This one's got Bale's name written all over it.
It would be lovely if he played and even better if he excelled and better still if there were Spurs fans there to see it. Saying you saw Gareth Bale play still means something.
But it does not seem as if he has the hunger any more, not the hunger he once had anyway.
Not everyone has the inner drive and insatiable work ethic of Cristiano Ronaldo. Bale is 31. Perhaps he is just too balanced a human being to want to sacrifice his life for football any longer.
Some are starting to train their sights on Bale and question his commitment but he made it plain some time ago that he favoured a move from the Bernabeu to China and it was obvious then which way he saw his career heading. China offered big money and a lower standard where he could still excel. He didn't try to hide that.
It's not Mourinho's fault, either. He does not favour an expansive style that might provide a better platform for a player of Bale's waning talents but it is not as if that has come as a surprise to anyone.
Whatever you think of his style, Mourinho picks players on their merits. If he thinks a player is going to help him get results, he plays him. He calls the shots. Bale doesn't fit the profile.
The longer the season goes on and the longer Bale is marginalised, the more it looks as if his arrival was a public relations stunt gone wrong.
It feels like a misguided sop to a fanbase uneasy about the departure of Mauricio Pochettino and worried that Mourinho was a manager past his sell-by date.
Bale was a sticking plaster to cover a gaping wound. A triumph for image over reality. Mourinho's best days have gone and so have Bale's. Together, it is hard to argue that they have been anything other than a marriage made in hell.
Perhaps the most surprising aspect is that Bale's move was sanctioned by Spurs' chairman Daniel Levy, the king of the deal, a man admired throughout the game for his ability to sniff out a bargain in the transfer market and for his clever husbandry of Tottenham.
By his standards, the loan signing of Bale has been an expensive and humiliating bust. Upwards of £10million in wages for a bloke to sit on the bench most of the season doesn't seem like much of a bargain to me. Now, things have switched and Bale's presence has become a source of rancour rather than a force for unity.
When TV presenter and reporter Alison Bender asked Mourinho after the defeat by Chelsea why Bale had been an unused substitute, Mourinho switched to the unpleasant, personal, demeaning attack mode he favours when things are going wrong.
'Good question, he snapped, 'but you don't deserve an answer.' Stay classy, Jose.
The irony is that Bale was signed as the vehicle Mourinho could use in his journey back to relevance. At a club that prizes attractive football, Bale was to be the camouflage for his manager's outmoded philosophy.
Instead, two greats of the game are racing each other to its exit door.
wiuklostz
0
At least now everyone is seeing the truth about Bale. He was never the baller the media and certain others made him out to be. And when he arrived at Real it wasn't long before he got found out. Look at Spurs now, even Mourinho admits they are nothing without Kane, which isn't true and says more about Mourinho than Spurs but what is true is that Bale with all his over rated hype is in no way shape or form a suitable replacement for Kane. Now that's seriously expensive and immensely shameful all round. Again if Spurs had Chelsea board someone or two would have been history so long ago and rightly so! Ambramovich ain't about to waste money on either of these two has been or wanna be's however you see them you choose. For me Bale always been a never been.
Rav_Brar
0
I was so looking forward to seeing Bale back at Spurs but it unfortunately hasn’t worked out for him :(
Kuhblnsy
0
can they please leave Gareth Bale alone. When he plays they criticize him. When he dosen't play they criticize him still. Am sure if he decides to retire today , they will still criticize him.
oh shut up
DaniloBossy
0
I said this when he moved Gareth Bale is done He has no zeal No desire whatsoever to play at the highest level And I doubt his commitment and hardwork too
PorkPunter
1
Madrid reject, like ass Ozil.
laoadekmru
0
Bale time at the Highest level is expires, maybe he can try something else. he's not a goat
Mishell Olawale
1
: 'Wales, Golf, Retirement .in that order.'
Aguerooooo10
0
he ays better in wales so he must go to wales club....like Cardiff
Mishell Olawale
1
"The Spanish giants were cast as ungrateful wretches for their classless treatment of him but it is hard to argue now that their judgment was wrong. " I told ya'll we had nothing to do with his Downfall..
sozcdilryz
1
bale is laughing all the way to the bank
fecaceikpu
0
Ohk he is Baletolle right
makenzie3
1
bad idea he can retire
niedikopry
0
http://www.fiverr.com/s2/2b5049fa73 Fast money making guys don't miss ot
Kucntuy
3
Bale should quit football now
spemrio
2
were is his hunger?? maybe he needs dis
maxm70
2
can they please leave Gareth Bale alone. When he plays they criticize him. When he dosen't play they criticize him still. Am sure if he decides to retire today , they will still criticize him.
beece_ngumex
3
Bale seems to be in a private world of his own. He is happy he is collecting the dough and doing nothing.
ceydekmopu
0
cr7
widckopy
1
Jose give him start tommoro Let him prove if he fails do what you like
SiveNxasana
0
how about in Southampton ?
At this point, anywhere is fine
Luke10
3
At the end of the day we laughing at him while his earning the MULA
AnijhaFidelis
0
He should join Barcelona
RaiyanHasib
0
No commitment whatsoever, he should probably retire in Wales
[image]
how about in Southampton ?
SiveNxasana
3
No commitment whatsoever, he should probably retire in Wales