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How Jorge Molina’s unlikely Indian summer has lifted Getafe to dizzying new heights

Player of the weekend: The 37-year-old scored one of the goals of the season as Getafe continued their fine run of form. He is our pick from across Europe’s top five leagues this weekend

Luke Brown
Monday 10 February 2020 11:40 GMT
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Jorge Molina celebrates his stunning second goal
Jorge Molina celebrates his stunning second goal (EPA)

The match: Getafe 3-0 Valencia

The player: Jorge Molina Vidal

Allow me to let you in on a trade secret. When writing about Spanish side Getafe, it is compulsory to mention the following facts. The club is from a small city on the outskirts of Madrid, with a population of just 180,000. They have the sixth smallest budget in La Liga and the third smallest stadium. And they were founded as recently as 1983, spending more seasons playing outside of the top flight than in it.

Should you fail to include any of those, you are in big trouble. The Sports Journalism Association suddenly appear at your door to snap all your pens and smash your laptop over their knee and, before you know it, you are forced to quit the industry to go and get a proper job.

The point is this: Getafe should not be doing this well. They should not be thumping teams like Valencia, as they managed on Saturday afternoon. They should not be sat as high as third in La Liga. And they most definitely should not be hanging on the coattails of Real Madrid and Barcelona, in with a very real chance of qualifying for next season’s Champions League.

Yet the most remarkable thing about Getafe is that none of that stuff is currently the most remarkable thing about Getafe. How could it be when their star player and captain is veteran striker Jorge Molina, a 37-year-old qualified teacher with a degree in PE who is — somewhat ridiculously — a year older than the club he plays for.

Molina’s career has had almost as many endings as The Lord of The Rings. It took him until the age of 25 to win his first professional contract and his short time at the top of the game appeared over when, in 2016, he was released on a free transfer by Real Betis. But he bounced back at Getafe, steering the club from the Segunda División into La Liga, later developing a strike partnership with fellow thirtysomething Jamie Mata that would take the club into the Europa League.

And, on Saturday, Vidal produced one of his finest performances yet.

There is real needle between Getafe and Valencia after a bitter Copa del Rey quarter-final tie last season and a Champions League race that went down to the wire. Valencia eventually came out on top in each of those battles but they currently sit behind Getafe in the table and deservedly fell behind when Molina broke the deadlock midway through the second-half, by beating both Mouctar Diakhaby and Gabriel Paulista to a rebound.

But it was his second goal that will live long in the memory.

Jorge Molina celebrates his stunning second goal (EPA)

Running onto a Mata through-ball, Molina found himself in front of three defenders with nobody to pass to. The normal thing for a striker to have done in his situation would be to shoot, hoping for a fortuitous deflection. But instead, for reasons only he knows, Molina decided to keep running. As the defenders converged on him, Molina rolled the ball between the legs of the sliding Paulista and turned, utterly wrong footing both Diakhaby and Geoffrey Kondogbia, who twisted away from the striker in perfect synchronisation.

And with that, the coast was clear. Molina, now on the edge of the six-yard box, had time to adjust his body shape, look up, and thrash a powerful left-footed strike beyond the dive of Jaume Doménech. Mata would score another just before the whistle, to complete a 3-0 win.

After the match, Molina was characteristically modest. “Our strength is that we are a team,” he said, no doubt to the disappointment of local reporters hunting for a quote worthy for their backpages. “So it really does not matter who plays.” (No matter. Paulista later prevented the headline when he marched off the pitch and declared that Valencia’s performance had been “shit all over”.)

The question now is how high can Getafe go? Their next three matches are likely to prove instructive. On Saturday they travel to Barcelona, the team sat one position above them in La Liga. After that they return home, for the first leg of their Europa League Round of 32 match against last season’s Champions League semi-finalists Ajax, as well as a huge clash with Sevilla, who sit just three points behind them in the league.

Getafe sit third in the league (EPA)

In all of them, Molina will be key. This time last season, as Getafe kept winning and winning, the club’s fans began the campaign for the veteran to win his first international cap. With his 38th birthday two months before Euro 2020 that dream is now even more unlikely, but if Getafe keep upsetting the odds then who knows? There have been few Indian summers as blazing hot as this. Romance in modern football is far from dead.

Honourable mentions:

Fabio Borini (Hellas Verona)

Hellas Verona stunned Juventus (Getty)

There was much mirth when ex-Liverpool, Crystal Palace and Aston Villa striker Borini completed a loan move away from AC Milan last month, having managed just four goals in 51 Serie A appearances. Yet he already has half that amount for new side Hellas Verona, scoring again on Saturday as the unlikely Europa League challengers stunned champions Juventus 2-1.

Given the paucity of strikers in the Premier League, expect to see him make a triumphant and lucrative return to England sometime soon. See also: Slimani, Islam, who came off the bench for Monaco to win their game at Amiens.

Emre Can (Borussia Dortmund)

Emre Can introduces himself (Getty)

Can is another former Liverpool player who is regularly — and a little unfairly — mocked for his post Premier League career. But the midfielder introduced himself to new side Borussia Dortmund in stunning fashion, curling home an outrageous curled effort from 30 yards on his debut.

But the magic did not last. In an entertaining game, Leon Bailey and Lars Bender popped up with late goals to seal a 4-3 victory for Bayer Leverkusen.

Lionel Messi (Barcelona)

Messi is back in form (Getty)

For once he didn’t score, but he did assist all three of Barcelona’s goals in their 3-2 win at Real Betis on Sunday night. He became just the second player this season to reach double figures in goals and assists in Europe’s top five leagues, after Jadon Sancho, as well as the second player to record a hat-trick of assists as well as goals, after Timo Werner.

A penny for the thoughts of poor Eric Abidal.

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