There is no possible reconciliation between Vinícius and Mestalla

In a coincidence more than sought after by the authorities, while the Valencia bus stopped on Avenida de Sweden, the Real Madrid bus did so in the solitude of Juan Regla street, the smallest of those that surrounds Mestalla, completely isolated by police.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
02 March 2024 Saturday 03:23
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There is no possible reconciliation between Vinícius and Mestalla

In a coincidence more than sought after by the authorities, while the Valencia bus stopped on Avenida de Sweden, the Real Madrid bus did so in the solitude of Juan Regla street, the smallest of those that surrounds Mestalla, completely isolated by police. While almost 15,000 Che fans cheered their team, Vinícius was one of the last to enter the stadium. He did it with a backpack and tiny white headphones, as if he wanted to isolate himself from the noise. Just a few months ago, upon his arrival at the Valencia Coliseum, he had to listen to some insults, later converted into racist ones during the game by three undesirables who are still being tried. Fortunately, neither inside nor outside the stadium was the scene repeated this Saturday beyond some “what a fool you are”, and football regained the prominence that it should never have abandoned. Of course, although Valencia did not let Netflix in, not a single camera lost detail of all the Brazilian's movements.

If something was clear, it is that there is no possible reconciliation between Mestalla and Vinícius, who continues to adorn his goals with reprehensible attitudes, at the antipodes of sportsmanship. With Ancelotti at the helm, the white dressing room continues to work with the Brazilian star to try to shape some of his reactions but it is becoming increasingly clear that it is a job in vain. It didn't take long for Vinícius to fire up the stands. At 33 seconds he received Foulquier's first kick and at seven minutes, the second. Immediately afterwards, he raised two fingers and began his war of words with Gil Manzano. Gayá took over from the referee and also measured forces with the Brazilian, who did not avoid any confrontation. There Bellingham emerged as his best bodyguard, his English saturated with so much nonsense, and which he would repeat in the second half when his partner had a fight with Hugo Duro.

Vinícius, a great player with the ball, scorer of Real Madrid's two goals, had finished stirring up Mestalla by celebrating his second goal by covering his ears, looking at the crowd and demanding more whistles for himself. Before leaving the pitch, already reprimanded, he lost his head one last time not without reason after Gil Manzano's surreal decision signaling the end in the middle of Bellingham's shot and slipped into the fray, having to be separated by two of his teammates. of the. This time, Mestalla couldn't even whistle at him, the shock had not yet passed.