Thursday, 7 March 2013

Football Icons: Part 4 - Michael Laudrup

By David Lee Wheatley


Dane who crossed the divide

Stylish Danish midfielder Michael Laudrup achieved a feat that few others have managed by playing for both Barcelona and Real Madrid and still holding the respect and affections of both sets of fans to this day; the fact that Laudrup was a fine player is one of the few subjects the arch-rivals can agree on!

Born June 15th 1964 in Fredriksberg into a footballing family, the young Michael started playing for Vanløse IF before the family moved when Finn Laudrup, Michael’s father, became player/coach at Brøndby IF in 1973. Both Michael and younger brother Brian began playing for the youth side at the club setting them both on a journey to fabulous careers in professional football.

Three years later, Finn was on the move again to Københavns Boldklub in the Danish first division and Michael made the switch with him, while brother Brian remained with Brøndby. Michael made his senior debut for the club in 1981, before returning to Brøndby IF in ’82. The promising Laudrup scored 15 goals and won the Danish Player of the Year award that year; already he was showing how much potential he possessed.

His international debut came in 1982 for Denmark, with Laudrup becoming the second-youngest national team player in his country’s history. He played a portion of the 1983 season in the Danish league before Serie A giants Juventus of Turin came to prise him away from his homeland.

Due to the two-foreigner rule imposed on Italian clubs at the time, Laudrup was the odd one out of the three foreign players on Juve’s books. Boniek and Platini were important first-team players for the Bianconeri and that led to the young Dane going out on loan to Lazio for his first two seasons in Italian football. Lazio weren’t very strong at the time and narrowly avoided relegation in Laudrup’s debut season in Rome. The second season was even more of a struggle and they finished bottom of the table, sealing relegation to Serie B. Despite his adopted club’s troubles, Michael starred on the international stage and played a fine Euro ’84 tournament, playing in all four of Denmark’s games.

It had been a harsh introduction to life in Italy, but he remained undeterred. His situation dramatically improved when he returned to Turin to replace Boniek and became the second foreign player alongside French international star Michel Platini. The 1985-86 was hugely successful for the club as they won the Scudetto and the Intercontinental Cup. Laudrup’s form for Juve earned him his second Danish Player of the Year accolade; it seemed he’d finally arrived on the Italian football map.

Denmark went to the 1986 World Cup in Mexico and Laudrup will be remembered for a fine solo run and goal in the 6-1 demolition of Uruguay. It was further proof of the starlet’s ability and poise on the ball.

Unfortunately, injury setbacks the season after restricted Laudrup and his form suffered. He struggled to regain the high standards of the Scudetto-winning campaign and with Platini’s retirement in 1987 there came pressure to become the leader of the team, which didn’t materialise. The 23-year-old failed to live up to the fans’ expectations during the 1987-88 season, playing 30 games without a goal. There followed a disappointing Euro ’88 competition for Denmark, but at least Laudrup managed to notch one strike there.

After six indifferent years in Italy, Laudrup thought the time was right for a move and in 1989 he joined Catalonia’s finest FC Barcelona. Laudrup’s childhood hero Johan Cruyff was the head coach at the Nou Camp and it was he who convinced the Dane to make transfer to a club that was making big plans to recapture success at home and in Europe.

Laudrup became a massive part of the so-called Barcelona ‘Dream team’ that swept all before them with four consecutive La Liga titles between 1991-1994, a Copa del Rey triumph in ’89 and the crowning glory of a European Cup victory in 1992. It was a golden period for the club and the technically-gifted playmaker Laudrup was integral to the side’s success. His skill, poise, passing and dribbling ability marked him out as one the most gifted footballers of his generation.

His international career went through a highly turbulent era while playing in Spain when he and others fell out with coach Richard Møller Nielsen three games into qualifying for Euro ’92. It was November 1990 when Laudrup announced his retirement from national team duty and his country missed out on tournament qualification initially. But, of course, Yugoslavia were omitted from the competition at the last-minute allowing Denmark a reprieve as replacements. Against all odds, Denmark went all the way to trophy-winning glory, while Laudrup watched from afar on holiday. After much consideration, he returned to Nielsen’s squad in 1993 but couldn’t help his country to qualify for the ’94 World Cup.

Back to club duty, the most controversial move of his career occurred when the attacking midfielder joined Real Madrid. The Spanish media were convinced that Laudrup had moved to the capital simply to upset Johan Cruyff, whom he’d fallen out with towards the end of his time with Barcelona. The Dane strenuously denied this by pointing out that Real Madrid were a club hungry to win, much like Barça had been when he signed for them. Laudrup liked the challenge of getting a club back on top after a few years of playing second fiddle to their rivals; he’d done just that with Barça, but now he had switched to Real in an attempt to achieve the reverse.

It proved to be a great call as Real Madrid put an end to the dominance of Barça in La Liga, which also meant the Dane became the first player ever to win the Spanish league five years in a row with two different clubs. It was a huge achievement with significant repercussions across the Spanish game, as the country now had two titanic clubs both good enough to win the title and Laudrup was the player that linked them. Would the Barcelona fans turn against their one-time hero?

A disappointing second season in Madrid was to follow, as Real failed to maintain their supremacy in La Liga. However, Laudrup helped his country to qualification for Euro 1996 by scoring 4 goals in 10 matches, but the tournament itself was a let-down for the nation.

The J-League in Japan was a burgeoning football league at the time, much like MLS now, and Laudrup decided he would like a new adventure with Vissel Kobe. He took his fledgling club to promotion to the top-flight of Japanese football, before ending his club career back in Europe and in sparkling fashion with a title-winning season with Ajax in Holland.

His swansong as a player came at the French World Cup of 1998 where he captained the national side on the road to the quarter-final stage. They narrowly lost out 3-2 to eventual runners-up Brazil at the last-eight stage in one of the matches of the tournament.

Laudrup was a remarkably skilful, stylish player that transcended the rivalry between two of the world’s biggest clubs and enjoyed a hugely successful time with both. The fans of both Real Madrid and Barcelona hold Laudrup in such high esteem that the majority of supporters would happily see him back at their respective sides in a coaching capacity in the future. There aren’t many people in the world of football that can truly say they are an icon at both clubs!
 
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