download All Football App

Braithwaite to Barcelona: Leganes left couting cost of Catalans' incompetence

  /  autty

Odion Ighalo’s loan from Shanghai Shenhua to Manchester United is no longer the strangest transfer move of 2020.

Three weeks after the window closed, Barcelona have surpassed the Red Devils by triggering the release clause of Leganes striker Martin Braithwaite at a cost of €18 million (£15.6m/$19.4m).

From Middlesbrough's bench to Barcelona, the Championship to Camp Nou, in little over a year, life comes at you fast. Braithwaite left Teeside at loggerheads with then-coach Tony Pulis in January 2019 and will now be lining up alongside Lionel Messi.

But how did it come to this? The Spanish champions have been bailed out by relegation-battling Leganes, a side which was forced to sell their other starting striker to Sevilla weeks ago, after the Andalusians paid Youssef En-Nesyri’s buy-out clause.

Barca were free to steal Braithwaite away from Leganes because of a La Liga rule that permits clubs to sign players on an emergency basis if one of their existing squad members is ruled out for five months or longer. The player must be a free agent or from within Spain.

French winger Ousmane Dembele’s hamstring tear ruled him out for six months and after the Spanish FA ratified his injury report, Barcelona were given the green light to make a move outside of the transfer window.

However, the deal has caused a great deal of controversy in Spain because Leganes will not be able to replace Braithwaite.

The Pepineros are 19th, level on 19 points with bottom-of-the-table Espanyol, and losing their first-choice forward will be a brutal blow to their survival hopes. Under new coach Javier Aguirre they had shown signs of improvement, but this may strike them down once and for all, through no fault of their own.

Spanish clubs are required to give all players a buy-out clause and some insist upon a low figure upon joining a new club so that they can easily move on if an inviting opportunity comes along.

However, usually the selling club would have some chance to replace the man they lose. Leganes, though, have been left a group of forwards without a single goal between them this season.

The worst thing about this whole sorry affair is that Barcelona are in a mess of their own making and Leganes have been treated like irrelevant collateral damage.

The Catalans should have brought another forward in during the winter window. But they failed to tie up a deal for Valencia’s Rodrigo Moreno. Then, they comically pulled the plug on a loan move for Cedric Bakambu when the Congo forward had already started on the first leg of his journey to Spain’s east coast from China.

"Yo, Transfermarkt, change my transfer history with 'almost Barcelona' please," Bakambu tweeted, taking the late collapse of the proposed deal in good humour. Nobody at Leganes is smiling now, though.

Barcelona already had Luis Suarez sidelined for four months and know by now they cannot rely on Dembele’s fitness. Quique Setien had been impressed with the winger in training as he bid to return from another injury, but over the past two years he has shown his fragility.

Borussia Dortmund signed human wrecking ball Erling Braut Holland for €20m (£16.7m/$21.6m) at the end of December and watching the 19-year-old Norwegian sensation rip Paris Saint-Germain apart in the Champions League on Tuesday, it is hard not to wonder how Barcelona have ended up spending nearly as much on Braithwaite.

The Danish international is the shortest of short-term solutions; he cannot even feature in the Champions League. No matter what sporting director Eric Abidal says at his presentation, there is a very real chance that he will be discarded at the end of the season.

Barcelona will argue they were trying to save resources to spend in the summer, with moves for PSG’s Neymar and Inter Milan’s Lautaro Martinez planned, but this is a situation they should have handled so much better.

They flip-flopped between options for their emergency replacement, with Willian Jose first linked before Getafe’s Angel Rodriguez took over as the supposed prime candidate. Barcelona made checks on other forwards too, including Alaves' Lucas Perez and Levante’s Roger Marti.

Levante wanted €30m (£25.1m/$32.4m) for Marti, a figure Barcelona were unwilling to meet, so they eventually settled on Braithwaite.

After disappointing stints with Middlesbrough and Bordeaux, the Dane has at least looked more comfortable at Leganes, with 10 strikes in 38 matches a solid if unspectacular record for a relegation-battling team. He is the club’s top scorer this season with six goals in 24 Liga clashes.

At Barcelona, of course, he will no longer be feeding on scraps, instead being served three-course meals by Messi. But his signing is still a gamble, not far removed from last year's regrettable loan deal for Kevin-Prince Boateng. The Ghanaian played four times for Barcelona, scoring no goals.

Braithwaite will face even more scrutiny than Boateng because of the controversy surrounding his transfer. In fairness to the striker, he is not at fault. He even made a point of speaking face-to-face with the Leganes president on Wednesday before departing.

Owner Felipe Moreno understood why the player wanted to go, but he now has to deal with the mess that Barcelona have left behind.

"The truth is that we're very worried. After what happened with En-Nesyri, staying in this league gets harder every day,” said Moreno.

The debacle highlights the injustice of Leganes’s position and the total lack of foresight at Barcelona.

The Madrid minnows have long been hanging on to their Liga status by a thread and the Catalans may have just cut it.