Text size:

  • Small
  • Normal
  • Large
Levante's Juanfran Garcia, left, vies for the ball with Getafe's Venezuelan forward Nicolas Fedor 'Miku' .

Levante slump should set alarm bells ringing


The Levante fairy tale has come crashing down. Valencia's second club stunned football when they drew their opening two games before winning seven to sit above Barcelona in the Primera Liga table by October.

That they did so with a new manager and an ageing team of players brought in on loan showed that football could still be gloriously unpredictable, that David could still slay Goliath.

Such was their early-season form, they are still in fourth place in the league after 20 games, yet Levante have triumphed just twice in 11 games since October. The goals have dried up, the injuries mounted and the fans who were waiting to greet the team in the autumn are now booing them at home matches.

Football attracts the feckless and the fickle. Levante have gone five games without a win and could only draw at home with bottom club Real Zaragoza two weeks ago before losing at home to struggling Getafe last weekend.

Both games were dire, but a bigger blow was being thrashed 7-1 over two legs in the Spanish Cup by Valencia.

Levante's form is now the relegation form which everyone expected before a ball was kicked at the start of the season, with the autumnal victories a distant memory.

They will surely be overhauled by the chasing pack of Espanyol, Athletic Bilbao and the in-form Atletico Madrid. That's not the main concern. Preventing a slide down the table and into the relegation zone, is.

More articles

Poll

Should Chennai Super Kings – whose owner has been arrested on charges of betting – be allowed to play in tonight's IPL final?

Editor's Picks

Events

To add your event to The National listings, click here

E-Paper

e-paper

View the paper as it appeared in print

Register here

Download the iPad ereader

Here

App

e-paper

Keep up to date with the latest news on the move

Get your iPhone app here