“T oday we talked about Cádiz,” said Xavi Hernández, Barcelona’s coach, and the only person there taking questions. “We talked about Cádiz, we watched a video on Cádiz, we did some Cádiz set plays, everything we did is Cádiz.
We took a retreat in Cádiz.” Cádizian isolation, he called it, and it would be a good choice. A festival of parody and rebellion, serious about being silly – carnival was just beginning there, over 1,000km south-west of Catalonia, Europe’s most ancient city becoming its most enjoyable, too.
A lot more fun than where Barça actually found themselves, that’s for sure. “I try to focus on the football, but this club has these things,” Xavi said.
Barcelona faced Manchester United and then Cádiz this past week; they also faced something much more serious, as did the entire Spanish game.