Saturday, March 14, 2026

Brain Fade at Mirpur, Outrage on the Field and The Eternal Debate between Law and Spirit

Cricket rarely runs out of ways to test its own conscience.

On Friday at Mirpur’s Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, the second ODI between Bangladesh and Pakistan produced one of those moments where the laws of the game stood firm, but the emotions around them wavered.

Pakistan were well placed at 230 for three when the incident unfolded, a moment of hesitation, a lapse of awareness, and then chaos.

Captain Mehidy Hasan Miraz, bowling the 39th over, delivered a length ball that Mohammad Rizwan drove straight back down the pitch.

Instead of retreating quickly to the crease, Salman Ali Agha lingered outside, attempting to collect the ball and return it to the bowler, a gesture often seen in cricket, but one that carries risk when the ball is still in play.

Miraz moved swiftly behind him, gathered the ball, and struck the stumps directly.

Agha was out of his ground.

The appeal was immediate.

So was the argument.

Gloves were thrown.

Words were exchanged.

Tempers rose.

The umpire referred the decision upstairs, but the outcome was inevitable.

Agha walked back furiously, still protesting, while players from both sides exchanged heated words.

Litton Das and Najmul Hossain Shanto were seen trying to calm the situation, yet the mood remained charged long after the wicket had fallen.

Agha’s dismissal for 64 off 62 balls proved decisive.

Pakistan collapsed from 230 for three to 274 all out - a slide triggered not only by a wicket, but by a moment that unsettled the rhythm of the innings.

The law is clear and it favours Miraz

The controversy, however, was never about the scorecard.

It was about whether the dismissal was right.

Under MCC Law 38, the bowler is fully entitled to run out a batter who leaves the crease while the ball is in play.

The law states that:

The ball remains live after the shot is played.

A batter outside the crease can be run out at any time.

A bowler is under no obligation to warn the batter.

By these standards, Miraz’s action was entirely legal.

There was another layer to the incident.

Had Bangladesh appealed, Agha could even have been given out obstructing the field under Law 37.4, which states that a batter may not return the ball to a fielder without consent while the ball is still in play.

Former Pakistan captain Ramiz Raja voiced what many felt on air:

“As far as the Laws were concerned, he was out but sportsmanship took a hit.”

His remark captured the essence of cricket’s oldest dilemma,what is legal is not always what feels right.

The spirit of cricket, a flexible argument

The phrase spirit of cricket often surfaces when a dismissal feels uncomfortable.

Yet history shows that this spirit has never been applied consistently.

In 2022, the MCC formally clarified that running out a batter outside the crease is simply a run-out, not an act of unsporting behaviour.

The game moved on, even if the debates never did.

Modern cricket has seen similar incidents, such as, Sachithra Senanayake dismissing Buttler in 2014

Several warnings issued in international cricket to non-strikers leaving early

Each time, the same debate returned, law versus spirit, right versus tradition.

Perth 1979 when the past looked no different

Cricket’s memory offers an even sharper example.

The events at the WACA in 1979 remain one of the most debated episodes in Pakistan–Australia Test history - a match shaped not only by skill and endurance, but by questions of gamesmanship, retaliation, and the fragile boundary between the laws of cricket and its spirit. 

What began as a fiercely competitive Test gradually descended into a psychological contest, culminating in two controversial dismissals that overshadowed the cricket itself.

Pakistan entered the Perth Test with confidence after their dramatic victory at the MCG, where Sarfraz Nawaz’s astonishing 9 for 86, including a spell of 7 for 1, had given Pakistan a 1–0 lead in the two-Test series. 

The performance reinforced Pakistan’s growing reputation as a formidable fast-bowling side, built around Sarfraz, Imran Khan, and a relentless seam attack.

In response to Pakistan's 277 - Australia progressed confidently to 219 for 3, with Rick Darling and Allan Border both passing fifty.

Imran Khan and Mudassar Nazar fought back with three wickets each, but Australia still reached 327, securing a lead of 50, a significant advantage on a lively WACA surface.

Pakistan’s second innings again faltered early.

Majid Khan completed a pair, and the scoreboard read 153 for 6, leaving Australia firmly in control.

Once again, resistance came from the middle order.

Asif Iqbal and Imran Khan added a crucial 92-run partnership, though Imran contributed only 15, playing the role of blocker while Asif took charge. By stumps on the fourth day, Pakistan were 246 for 7, with Asif unbeaten on 101, and the lead stretched to 196.

The match was evenly poised but what followed would shift the narrative away from cricketing skill.

Pakistan’s lower order extended the lead, but not without incident.

No. 11 Sikander Bakht resisted stubbornly, batting for over half an hour.

Then, in an unexpected moment, Alan Hurst ran in to bowl, noticed Sikander backing up too far, and Mankaded him.

The dismissal was legal, but it stunned the Pakistan side and left visible resentment.

Even by the standards of the 1970s, an era far less sentimental about the “spirit of cricket,” the act was considered provocative.

Pakistan were eventually all out for 285, with Asif Iqbal left unbeaten on 134.

Australia needed 236 to win, a chase that seemed well within reach at the WACA

But the emotional balance of the match had shifted.

Australia began steadily, adding 87 for the opening wicket through Rick Darling and Andrew Hilditch.

Then came the moment that would define the Test.

Darling drove Sarfraz to cover, where Sikander Bakht casually returned the ball toward the pitch.

Hilditch, unaware of any danger, picked the ball up and tossed it back to Sarfraz.

Immediately, Sarfraz appealed.

Under the laws of cricket, Hilditch had handled the ball without permission, and umpire Tony Crafter had no choice but to give him out.

The dismissal was legal.

But it was also widely seen as deliberate retaliation for the Mankad.

From that point, the tone of the match hardened.

Australia won and levelled the series. 

The aftermath revealed how deeply the incident had unsettled both sides.

Kim Hughes condemned the dismissal: "It made us grit our teeth. It just wasn’t cricket."

On the Sikander run-out, Hughes was more measured: "It wasn’t a square-off, it was just part of cricket… Andrew showed great sportsmanship in picking up the ball. Sarfraz’s action was not part of professional cricket."

Remarkably, even Pakistan players distanced themselves from the episode.

Captain Mushtaq Mohammad, known for his combative nature, was equally candid:

"The Sikander run-out should never have happened. But two wrongs don’t make it right."

But Asif Iqbal admitted: "It was disgusting. I’m very sorry about it. It should never have happened."

Apologies came. War of words followed. But one thing remained firm, which was, both teams acted within the laws and played the game hard, rather than displaying a charity match like temperament. 

This is top level cricket. 

The Mirpur incident ultimately comes down to something simpler than morality.

No smart batter stands outside the crease while the ball is live.

No captain ignores a chance to take a wicket.

And no professional game allows sentiment to override the rulebook.

Salman Ali Agha suffered a moment of brain fade.

Mehidy Hasan Miraz remained alert.

In team sport, awareness is a skill.

Exploiting an opponent’s mistake is not betrayal, it is competition.

The spirit of cricket is often invoked when the outcome hurts, but the laws of cricket exist precisely to decide such moments without emotion.

If the laws truly contradict the spirit,

then the laws should be changed.

Until then, what Miraz did was not wrong.

It was cricket.

Sabina Park, 1999: Brian Lara’s Defiance in the Shadow of Decline

The West Indies entered the 1999 home series against Australia in a state of uncommon vulnerability.

The tour of South Africa that preceded it had exposed the fragility of a side once synonymous with dominance. Under Brian Lara, the team endured heavy defeats, and criticism from supporters was not merely vocal, it was unforgiving, almost accusatory, as if the captain himself carried the burden of an entire era’s decline.

Australia’s arrival in March only deepened the crisis.

The first Test ended in a crushing 312-run defeat, a result that confirmed the growing gulf between the once-invincible Caribbean side and the new masters of world cricket led by Steve Waugh.

The humiliation reached its lowest point in Trinidad.

On a pitch offering assistance but not terror, Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie tore through the West Indies batting, dismissing them for 51 in the second innings, the lowest total in their Test history.

For a team that had once reduced opponents to rubble with frightening regularity, the symbolism was brutal.

This was not merely defeat; it was the collapse of identity.

Jamaica: A Captain Under Siege

By the time the teams gathered at Sabina Park for the fourth Test, expectation had shrunk to survival.

The crowd arrived restless, suspicious, almost hostile. When Lara walked out for the toss, boos echoed around the ground, a rare sound in a region that once worshipped its cricketers.

Standing beside Waugh, Lara’s composure broke for a moment, his response sharp and unfiltered:

“This is the last time I’m going to put up with this shit.”

It was not the voice of a man seeking sympathy.

It was the voice of a captain who understood that his authority, his reputation, and perhaps even his place in West Indian cricket, were on trial.

Australia chose to bat and made 256, a total shaped almost entirely by Waugh’s century and Mark Waugh’s measured 67.

For the West Indies, Courtney Walsh led the resistance with four wickets, while Pedro Collins supported with three.

The score looked modest, but context mattered.

Against this Australian attack, even 256 felt imposing.

When the West Indies replied, the familiar pattern returned.

McGrath and Gillespie struck early.

At 37 for 4 by stumps, the match, and perhaps the series,  seemed already decided.

Lara remained, unbeaten on 7.

Not yet defiant.

Not yet dominant.

Just present, holding the last thread of resistance.

March 14, 1999: The Beginning of a Counterattack

The second morning changed everything.

Lara began quietly, guiding Jason Gillespie to fine leg, then driving with increasing authority.

Against McGrath he was cautious, almost calculating, but anything short was punished with the kind of certainty that only great players possess.

Australia turned to spin.

Stuart MacGill was expected to challenge Lara with flight and turn.

Instead, his first legal delivery, a slow full toss, disappeared to the boundary, and with it vanished any illusion of control.

MacGill searched for rhythm, but Lara refused to allow one.

Full tosses were driven.

Half-volleys were whipped through mid-wicket.

Anything short was pulled with disdain.

Then came the contest the crowd had been waiting for, Lara versus Shane Warne.

At first, Lara watched carefully.

Then he attacked.

Warne, the master of psychological pressure, found himself pushed onto the defensive, forced into short balls and protective fields.

The duel that once defined the mid-1990s was no longer balanced.

In Jamaica, the advantage belonged entirely to the batsman.

The Turning Point at 171

At 171 for 4, with Lara on 84, the match hung in uncertainty.

MacGill appealed for lbw.

The decision was not given.

Replays suggested the ball would have hit the stumps.

MacGill lost composure.

Lara seized momentum.

Two boundaries followed immediately, each stroke widening the psychological gap.

The drama intensified in the nineties.

A risky single, a throw from Justin Langer, broken stumps, a roar of appeal and then confusion.

The crowd, believing Lara had reached his hundred, stormed the field before umpire Steve Bucknor could confirm the decision.

When play resumed, Lara was safe.

The century stood.

It was not just a milestone.

It was the moment the match changed direction.

The Double Century: Authority Restored

With Jimmy Adams anchoring the other end, Lara accelerated.

MacGill was driven into the stands.

Warne was worked into gaps.

McGrath’s sledging found no reply, except boundaries.

On 183, Lara faced Greg Blewett.

Four consecutive boundaries followed, each stroke perfectly timed, each one a statement.

The double century came against Warne, an on-drive that raced to the rope with effortless precision.

The crowd invaded again, this time in pure celebration.

When Lara finally fell for 213, caught behind off McGrath, the damage was already done.

Not just to Australia, but to the narrative of inevitability that had surrounded the series.

West Indies went on to win the Test by ten wickets.

The series finished 2-2, the Frank Worrell Trophy shared.

An Innings Against History

Lara’s 213 at Sabina Park was more than a great innings.

It was an act of resistance in an era of decline.

At a time when the West Indies no longer frightened opponents, their captain reminded the world that greatness does not disappear quietly.

Sometimes it survives in a single innings, played under pressure,

against the best attack in the world, with an entire cricketing culture demanding proof that it still mattered.

In Jamaica, on that March morning,

Brian Lara did not merely score runs.

He restored belief.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Fire and Fury in Kandy: A Test Match of Controversy, Resilience, and Redemption

Cricket, at its most compelling, is not merely a contest of technique but a theatre of temperament. Matches are rarely decided by skill alone; they turn on fortune, on frailty, on the ability to endure when the game itself seems to turn hostile. The Test at Kandy between England and Sri Lanka was one such encounter, a match where the balance of power shifted almost session by session, where brilliance coexisted with bitterness, and where controversy threatened to overwhelm the contest itself.

Played beneath the mist-covered hills and palm-lined slopes of Kandy, the game unfolded like a slow-burning drama. It was rich in strokeplay, disciplined in bowling, and relentless in tension. Yet the match will not be remembered only for its cricket. It will be recalled for the succession of umpiring errors that altered momentum, the confrontations that exposed the players’ nerves, and the stubborn resilience that ultimately separated the two sides.

This was not simply England versus Sri Lanka.

It became a struggle against circumstance, against injustice, and, for several players, against their own composure.

Day One: Promise, Controversy, and Sudden Collapse

Sri Lanka began with intent. Their openers attacked from the outset, racing to 69 for two in just sixteen overs, the scoring brisk and confident. England appeared to be chasing the game before it had properly begun.

The turning point came with the introduction of Craig White, whose spell triggered both controversy and collapse. Kumar Sangakkara, momentarily losing sight of the ball, deflected it off his forearm towards gully. The appeal was optimistic; the decision, astonishing. Umpire Rudi Koertzen ruled him caught, despite clear evidence the ball had struck the elbow. Sangakkara’s instinctive protest, rubbing his arm in disbelief, earned him a reprimand, but it also set the tone for a match in which officiating would repeatedly intrude upon the contest.

White soon removed Aravinda de Silva, and the rhythm of Sri Lanka’s innings fractured. By lunch, the hosts had slipped to 93 for four, their early authority replaced by uncertainty.

The afternoon belonged to Mahela Jayawardene. His century was a study in control, elegant cuts, precise pulls, and an assurance that steadied Sri Lanka’s innings. For a time, the balance tilted back. But England’s seamers struck again with the new ball. Darren Gough and Andy Caddick dismantled the lower order with ruthless efficiency, the last five wickets falling for only twenty runs.

From dominance to disarray, Sri Lanka’s innings established the pattern the match would follow , momentum gained quickly, lost even faster.

Day Two: Fortune Changes Sides

England’s reply began uncertainly, the openers gone with only 37 on the board. Yet the same uncertainty that had hurt Sri Lanka now worked in England’s favour.

Nasser Hussain, himself a past victim of dubious decisions in Sri Lanka, found fortune on his side. Twice Muttiah Muralitharan induced bat-pad chances, and twice the appeals were rejected, first when Hussain had 53, then again on 62. The Sri Lankan fielders were incredulous, but there was no remedy.

Hussain responded as captains must. Alongside Graham Thorpe, he built a partnership of 167, England’s highest against Sri Lanka at the time, combining patience with timely aggression. Their stand shifted the psychological balance of the match.

Yet the instability of the Test refused to disappear. Both fell late in the day, and Graeme Hick, granted two unlikely reprieves in the space of eleven balls, failed to score at all, completing a painful duck that reflected England’s long-standing fragility.

By stumps, England had the advantage, but nothing in the match suggested it would last.

Day Three: Disorder, Anger, and the Collapse That Changed the Match

The third day descended into chaos.

Poor decisions, rising tempers, and a dramatic collapse combined to produce the most volatile phase of the Test.

England stretched their lead to 90, modest but valuable. Then came the moment that ignited the ground.

Sanath Jayasuriya slashed at Caddick and edged towards slip, where Graham Thorpe completed a spectacular diving catch. Replays made the truth obvious, the ball had struck the turf before carrying. Umpire Asoka de Silva’s raised finger provoked fury. Jayasuriya hurled his helmet in protest as he left the field, the anger of the crowd echoing his own.

From that moment, Sri Lanka unravelled.

Aravinda de Silva edged soon after. Sangakkara exchanged heated words with Michael Atherton, who in turn confronted both batsman and umpire with visible irritation. The match teetered dangerously close to losing control.

Amid the disorder, England’s bowlers remained coldly precise. By the close, Sri Lanka were effectively six wickets down with little on the board, their second innings collapsing in a blur of frustration and misfortune.

England, suddenly, were in command.

Day Four: Sangakkara’s Resistance

Where the innings had disintegrated, Sangakkara chose defiance.

Batting with freedom and controlled aggression, he counterattacked alongside Dharmasena, punishing anything loose and refusing to surrender the match without a fight. His strokeplay carried both elegance and anger, as if the injustice of earlier decisions had sharpened his resolve.

As his maiden Test century approached, the improbable began to seem possible. England’s lead no longer felt safe.

Hussain responded with calculation rather than panic. The field was adjusted, the bait set. Robert Croft floated a tempting delivery, mid-on pushed back to invite the lofted stroke. Sangakkara took the challenge, and fell.

With that dismissal, Sri Lanka’s resistance faltered. Gough finished the innings with relentless accuracy, his eight wickets across the match ensuring England required 161 to win — not easy, but attainable.

Day Five: Nerves, Spin, and an Unlikely Finish

A chase of 161 in Sri Lanka is never straightforward. Chaminda Vaas removed both Atherton and Trescothick early, and once again the match tightened.

Hussain and Thorpe steadied England with a partnership of 61, but their dismissals ensured the final day began in tension. Seventy runs remained, six wickets stood, and Muralitharan waited.

Stewart fell. Hick flickered briefly, striking two crisp boundaries before disappearing once more, his Test career symbolised in a moment of promise followed by disappointment.

The finish belonged to England’s lower order,Croft, White, and Giles , players not known for heroics but forced into them. Against Murali’s relentless spin, they survived, calculated, and advanced inch by inch.

There was no flourish at the end, only relief.

England crossed the line by four wickets, their composure holding where Sri Lanka’s had earlier broken.

A Match Remembered for More Than the Result

The Kandy Test stands as one of those rare matches where the scorecard tells only part of the story. It was a contest shaped as much by controversy as by skill, as much by emotion as by execution.

For England, the victory reflected the hardening mentality that Duncan Fletcher was beginning to instil, a side learning to endure pressure rather than collapse under it.

For Sri Lanka, the match carried both brilliance and bitterness. They played with flair, fought with courage, and yet were repeatedly undone by decisions beyond their control.

Cricket prides itself on fairness, but this Test was a reminder that the game is played by humans, and therefore never perfect.

That imperfection, painful as it was, made Kandy unforgettable.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Friday, March 13, 2026

A Glimpse into Cricketing Drama: Waqar Younis and the Unfolding Tale of Risk, Resilience, and the Unseen Power of Pace Bowling

In the crucible of competitive cricket, where fortunes can shift in the blink of an eye, the match between Pakistan and New Zealand stands out as a compelling testament to the sport's unpredictability. A game that saw sharp contrasts in approach and execution, it culminated in a rare tie, one that would go down in the annals of cricket history. The pivotal moments in this contest revolved around the supreme bowling of Waqar Younis, whose sheer pace and mastery of swing helped steer Pakistan to parity, while New Zealand’s middle order, unable to withstand the pressure, crumbled under the weight of reckless shot selection. In between, the subtle art of medium-paced bowling by Geoff Larsen quietly but effectively played its part in shaping the game.

Waqar Younis: The Unrelenting Force

Waqar Younis’ performance in this match was nothing short of exceptional. Known for his express pace and his devastating swing, Waqar’s opening burst was a tour de force that set the stage for the drama to unfold. His wicket of Young, delivered with a lethal yorker, was a perfect example of what made Waqar so dangerous: a fast, swinging ball that drew the batsman into a fatal error. This early breakthrough signalled Pakistan’s intent, and Waqar’s fiery energy ignited the match, giving his team a glimmer of hope in a contest that otherwise seemed to be slipping from their grasp.

However, it was his dismissal of Hart that truly highlighted his genius. The ball, which moved off the seam to knock over the stumps, displayed Waqar’s ability to not just bowl fast but to extract maximum value from the pitch. The break-back delivery was an art form in itself, catching Hart by surprise and further accentuating the chasm between the two sides. Waqar’s relentless assault continued to trouble the New Zealand batsmen, and as the innings wore on, it became evident that his influence was shifting the momentum in Pakistan's favour.

New Zealand's Middle Order: The Collapse Under Pressure

While Waqar’s brilliance was undeniable, the game was also a study in the fragility of New Zealand’s middle order. Faced with the twin pressures of chasing a diminishing target and with Waqar bowling with ferocity, the New Zealand batsmen resorted to risky strokes in a bid to counter the mounting pressure. This unwarranted aggression led to a series of wickets, each one punctuating the sense of unease that had settled in their ranks.

Despite a solid start to their innings, New Zealand’s reliance on high-risk shots began to backfire. The inability of the middle order to adapt to the changing conditions and Waqar’s sustained pressure became their undoing. They lost wickets at regular intervals, each more significant than the last, culminating in a pivotal moment when De Groen, looking for a leg-bye that could have secured the win, was dismissed lbw. Waqar had now claimed six wickets for just 30 runs, and New Zealand’s last six batsmen had managed to scrape together a mere 19 runs between them. The dramatic collapse highlighted the fact that cricket is not just about individual brilliance but also about managing pressure and temperament, something New Zealand's middle order failed to do on this occasion.

Larsen’s Unlikely Influence: The Craft of Medium-Pace

While the aggressive and destructive force of Waqar dominated the headlines, it was the quiet yet effective performance of Geoff Larsen that played an integral role in the game’s outcome. Known for his medium-slow pace, Larsen’s bowling was a perfect counterbalance to Pakistan’s fast bowlers. When the ball was not coming on to the bat, Larsen’s ability to keep it in tight areas forced the Pakistani batsmen into mistakes. His four-wicket haul underlined the effectiveness of subtlety in conditions that were far more suited to the express pace of Waqar.

Larsen’s success lay in his ability to extract value from the pitch without resorting to sheer speed. With the ball not coming through at pace, he invited the Pakistani batsmen to play across the line or misread the spin, both of which led to crucial wickets. The contrast between his methodical, measured approach and Waqar’s fiery pace was striking, yet both were equally effective in their own right. Larsen’s performance was a reminder of the oft-overlooked importance of variation in pace and the strategic use of medium-speed bowling.

The Unlikely Conclusion: A Tie for the Ages

The game reached its climax in the most unusual of ways: with a tie. While ties in cricket are not unheard of, this one stood apart due to the high drama and fluctuating fortunes throughout the match. Waqar’s scintillating spell, the rashness of the New Zealand middle order, and Larsen’s measured control ultimately culminated in a deadlock, as neither side was able to wrestle full control.

It was a game that demonstrated how cricket can transcend individual brilliance and turn into a collective story of risks, skill, and mental fortitude. Waqar’s relentless pressure was the lynchpin of Pakistan’s late resurgence, but New Zealand’s self-destructive middle-order play and Larsen’s quiet effectiveness ensured that the result was as much a reflection of tactical missteps as it was of individual excellence.

Conclusion: A Testament to the Unpredictability of Cricket

In the end, this match served as a microcosm of the larger uncertainties inherent in the sport of cricket. While Waqar Younis’ fiery pace and lethal deliveries were undeniably the most striking features of the game, it was the combination of factors, reckless shot-making, Larsen’s measured pace, and a fluctuating middle order, that ensured that the match would be remembered for its tension, drama, and its rare conclusion. The tie was a fitting metaphor for cricket itself: an unpredictable, fascinating game where the final outcome can never be assumed until the very last ball has been bowled.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar

Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Paradox of the Crown Jewel- Why Real Madrid Sometimes Look Stronger Without Mbappé

At the Santiago Bernabéu, success has always been tied to the mythology of stars. From Di Stéfano to Zidane to Cristiano Ronaldo, Real Madrid built its identity on the belief that greatness is achieved by assembling the brightest talents in the world. Yet the 2025/26 season has produced a paradox that challenges this very philosophy. The arrival of Kylian Mbappé, long considered the inevitable final jewel in Madrid’s crown, has not always made the team more complete. In fact, there are moments when Real Madrid appear more balanced, more cohesive, and more dangerous without him.

The recent 3–0 demolition of Manchester City in the Champions League Round of 16 felt less like a routine victory and more like a tactical statement. It was a performance that suggested that sometimes, the absence of the biggest star restores the symmetry of the constellation.

The Illusion of Starlight

There is a seductive idea in football that more talent automatically means better football. Real Madrid themselves helped create this illusion during the Galáctico era, when the club pursued superstars with almost philosophical devotion. Mbappé’s arrival was seen as the continuation of that tradition, the final piece that would make an already formidable side unstoppable.

But football is not astronomy. A team is not a sky where every star shines independently. It is an ecosystem where balance often matters more than brilliance.

Mbappé’s presence changes the geometry of the pitch. His gravitational pull is so strong that the team’s shape begins to bend toward him. Naturally, a second striker who prefers the left channel, he drifts into spaces that Vinícius Júnior also considers his territory. What should be a partnership sometimes becomes a territorial overlap - two kings standing on the same side of the battlefield.

Against Manchester City, without Mbappé, the field seemed wider, the movements cleaner, the structure more logical.

Symmetry Restored

Without the need to accommodate a dominant focal point, Madrid’s system regained its natural rhythm.

Vinícius Júnior returned to the touchline, stretching the opposition instead of sharing space. Federico Valverde’s hat-trick did not come from individual magic alone, but from structural balance that allowed midfielders to arrive late into the box. Players in the midfield moved freely between lines, while Pinar and Tchouaméni provided the physical security that allows Madrid to play with controlled aggression.

What stood out most was not the attacking brilliance, but the collective discipline. Without a forward who conserves energy for finishing, the team pressed as a unit, defended as a unit, and attacked as a unit. The numbers reflect this reality: Madrid concedes fewer goals when the front line works defensively, and the team’s transitions become sharper when responsibility is shared.

Against Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City - a side that thrives on predictability and positional control  Madrid’s unpredictability became their greatest weapon.

The Problem With Plan A

In my view, Mbappé’s presence often turns Real Madrid into a “Plan A” team. When he plays, the instinct is simple: find Mbappé, and let him decide the game. Given his finishing ability, that instinct is understandable. He may well be the most lethal forward in the world.

But Madrid’s history shows that their greatest European nights rarely depended on a single plan. The teams that won the 14th and 15th European Cups were not always the most talented on paper, but they were the most adaptable. They could win through control, through chaos, through counter-attack, or through sheer will.

Without Mbappé, Madrid look less predictable. Without a fixed reference point, their attack becomes fluid, their midfield more involved, and their defence more committed. They stop playing for one solution and start playing for every solution.

That unpredictability is exactly what makes them so dangerous in Europe.

Not a Criticism, but a Paradox

This is not an argument against Mbappé’s greatness. Few players in modern football can decide matches the way he can. Over a season, his goals will win titles, and his presence will terrify defenders in ways no tactical system can replicate.

But football is full of contradictions, and Real Madrid has always lived comfortably with them. Sometimes, the most brilliant individual can disturb the collective harmony. Sometimes removing the brightest star allows the whole sky to shine.

Real Madrid are not necessarily a better team without Mbappé.

They are, however, often a more balanced one.

And at the highest level of football, balance can be more powerful than brilliance.

Thank you 

Faisal Caesar