FC Barcelona’s difficult season has claimed its first casualty. Manager Luis Enrique announced on Wednesday that this will be his last season in charge of the Catalan giants.

The club’s former winger – who had won a La Liga-Copa del Rey-Champions League treble in his first season in charge in 2014-15, followed by a domestic double last year – declared his intention to leave Barça at a press conference following a simple 6-1 league win over Sporting Gijon.
“I will not be the manager of Barcelona next season,” the 46-year-old Luis Enrique said. “It’s a very difficult decision for me. I’ve thought about it a lot. But I believe that I have to be true to myself. … The way I do this job is why I have to leave. There are very few hours to rest. I need to rest.”

Lucho, as he is nicknamed, had made his announcement to his players first, after informing club president Josep Maria Bartomeu several days ago. He isn’t the first Barça manager to claim something of a burnout as his reason for leaving. Pep Guardiola did the same in 2012, going on a year-long sabbatical.
But Luis Enrique’s job was widely believed to be in peril, especially with his contract running out at the end of the season. While he had been enormously successful in his first two seasons – the club also won the Spanish Super Cup, the European Super Cup and the Club World Cup on his watch – Barcelona came unstuck this year.
The players and Bartomeu had expressed their faith in Luis Enrique, but indifferent form in La Liga from November through January had allowed Real Madrid to build up a lead. And while Barcelona is the towering favorite to win the Copa del Rey again against Alaves on May 27, that might be the only silverware it hoists this year. A disheveling 4-0 first-leg loss at Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League round of 16 has made another European crown all but impossible. That would also make this the first time in 10 seasons that the Catalans fail to reach the quarterfinals.
Yet Barça had been in the midst of a resurgence when Luis Enrique made his announcement. On Sunday, Lionel Messi’s late winner scraped out a key 2-1 win at Atletico Madrid. Wednesday’s win against Gijon – where Luis Enrique began his playing career, incidentally – was one of the most comfortable and convincing in months.
Barcelona had frequently failed to break down teams that press high, costing the Blaugranas an uncharacteristic amount of dropped points. All the same, the league title came back within reach just an hour after Luis Enrique made his decision public. A 10-man Real Madrid overcame a 3-1 deficit – and three disallowed Real goals by Alvaro Morata – to salvage a 3-3 draw with Las Palmas, spilling points for a second time in three league games after a 2-1 loss at Valencia on Feb. 22.
The tie by Real vaulted Barça back into the league lead by a point, although the arch-rivals from the capital hold a game in hand.
Several names are already circulating as possible successors for Luis Enrique, including Arsenal’s Arsene Wenger, Everton’s Ronald Koeman, Sevilla’s Jorge Sampaoli, Luis Enrique’s assistant Juan Carlos Unzue, Athletic Bilbao’s Ernesto Valverde and Real Sociedad’s Eusebio.
In the meantime, however, Luis Enrique and his team will try to salvage what remains of the season before moving on.

via Yahoo!Sports

About The Author

Beckett Frappier is a Houstonian, born and raised. For some reason, decided to go to Villanova in Philadelphia, where he flourished in the pick up basketball scene. Now, he resides in Dallas, Texas where he has become an unguardable force on the LA Fitness pickup basketball scene while working at a law firm during the day.

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