Barcelona finally got their man after months of trying - but why were they so intent on signing him now rather than the summer?
If the feeling for many around Liverpool and Barcelona was that Philippe Coutinho’s move to Camp Nou was always inevitable
there remains one big question as the saga finally comes to a close: why
did the Liga leaders go so strong to do it now and not in the summer?
Why potentially
irritate whom you’re doing business with? Why not look to just strike the
longer-term deal? Why possibly unsettle what had seemed a sensible deal?
Moreover, this
is the thing. So many do find it confusing. It was the inevitable and the
obvious, yet undercut by the unclear. So why?
The first reason
is obviously that Coutinho himself was desperate to go. The word from those
close to him was that he “would do anything in the world to get there”. He was
that intent on the deal now, and some of this is obviously Barca wanting to act
on that great desire and have a future star as happy as possible.
That said, those same people
close to him didn't think he would literally do “anything” to get there, mind.
They did not feel he would outright go on strike, despite some of the
suggestions, because he would almost certainly be there by the summer either
way.
That raises
something about Coutinho himself, too. He isn’t a Luis Suarez personality in
that way. He wouldn’t just dig in and do anything possible to get his way like
the Uruguayan, although Coutinho’s wife Aine is hugely keen on the move.
Barca themselves
aren’t quite in the same situation as they were when they signed Suarez in
2014. They just aren’t as flush. There is now a much greater requirement to
balance the books.
While there was
some talk that Liverpool should have waited until after the World Cup because
Coutinho’s price might go up even more, that is then precisely what the
Catalans didn’t want. They wanted to get it secured to avoid that.
Much has been
made of the amount brought in from Neymar’s move to Paris-Saint-Germain but the
majority of that has already gone on bringing in Ousmane Dembele from Borussia
Dortmund and - much more importantly and historically - securing the future of
Leo Messi.
This Coutinho
deal is also about legacy in another way, as it is to bring in the ideal
long-term successor to Andres Iniesta, but there is an immediacy there too.
After their surge to a commanding position at the top of the Spanish table in
the first half of the season, Barca now feel even more could be on and they
could reclaim the Champions League this season. Coutinho is cup-tied - and
the potential individual frustrations of that are another angle there - but his
mere presence means Iniesta will not be used as much in what is a
thin squad, and will now be fresher for continental matches.
A lot of that
makes sense from a football and business perspective, then, but still not
necessarily from a negotiation perspective. More than most clubs, this
Liverpool hierarchy does not like the sense they’re being bullied, and justifiably
dug in. The pure businessman in John W Henry is said to almost take such
impositions as an affront.
If they sold, as
one figure put it, it was always only going to be on their terms.
Barca were always determined to change those terms and now they've
got their man.


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