Did Franco’s Real Madrid have an Unfair Advantage?

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  • čas přidán 13. 04. 2020
  • General Franco’s Real Madrid?
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    There is no real proof and no tangible evidence that suggests Madrid were exclusively ‘Franco’s team’. But Spain’s leader did undoubtedly used football for political leverage. Real Madrid’s history, their rivalry with Barcelona, the shape of modern Spanish football: without Franco, all of this would look very different.
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @pieters542
    @pieters542 Před 4 lety +1036

    When Cruyff got to Barcelona, he wanted to register his son as Jordi, the patron saint of Barcelona. It was denied because Jordi was a Catalan name, they wanted to change it to Jorge. Cruyff flew to Amsterdam, had his son registered as Jordi and the Catalans loved it.

    • @waspenterprise1
      @waspenterprise1 Před 4 lety +22

      PieterS he hated Adidas so much he would sow a 4th stripe onto jerseys... he was first one to use a number outside 1-11 too

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 4 lety +137

      Ajax agreed with Madrid his transfer but cruyff said I am not going to the regime's team. Brave man

    • @amateurtoyhunter7513
      @amateurtoyhunter7513 Před 4 lety +94

      Even better, Ajax wanted to sell Cruyff to Madrid. However Cruyff said he wouldn't sign for a club that represented Franco.

    • @SomalieDXB
      @SomalieDXB Před 4 lety +30

      Rest in peace Cruyff. He was a true legend in every sense.

    • @alfgui3295
      @alfgui3295 Před 4 lety +6

      Jordi Cruyff who was born in Amsterdam? really? wow, Franco was really powerful, he even controlled Netherlands civil registry. Barcelona PR bullshit about Franco when they were one of the most benefited teams, (saved from bankruptcy by Fascist regime) is amazing, now you can understand that many Catalans believe all that bullshit because the Catalan radical nationalism is controlling education in Catalonia... but please, can you you explain to me how you foreigns are that naive to believe all that bullshit?

  • @gavinperry8433
    @gavinperry8433 Před 4 lety +492

    Maybe true ..... but the real question is could they do it on a cold rainy night at stoke

    • @genocidejoe
      @genocidejoe Před 4 lety +17

      Please if man city can do what they do at the premier league, what the fuck would prime real madrid do with a average premier league team

    • @bot6349
      @bot6349 Před 4 lety +21

      Lingard can

    • @youunculturedswine264
      @youunculturedswine264 Před 4 lety +29

      muhamed ali nah stoke would destroy you, 11 to 1

    • @abhishekbej
      @abhishekbej Před 4 lety +8

      @@genocidejoe r/whooosh

    • @zhabiz5153
      @zhabiz5153 Před 4 lety

      @@youunculturedswine264 be real mate

  • @KartikBharadwaj
    @KartikBharadwaj Před 4 lety +673

    First video after merging with The Athletic and there's no mention of them. Hahahaha. Great content though.

    • @kyriacos87
      @kyriacos87 Před 4 lety +92

      There's no need now. They *are* them.

    • @KGBgringo
      @KGBgringo Před 4 lety +19

      Remember this moment, it'll probably be one of the last videos made before the merger. RIP quality control at tifo.

    • @sicals1720
      @sicals1720 Před 4 lety +14

      Aryan Sharma its tifo’s video. But they no longer need to mention they are basing it on The Athletic article because of the merge.

    • @JM-pm3ob
      @JM-pm3ob Před 4 lety +6

      Are you seriously upset by the little Athletic ads at the very end of videos? The ones you can turn off immediately without missing out on any content?

    • @alebangalter
      @alebangalter Před 4 lety +2

      RIP to all the jokes and stuff appearing on the athletic

  • @TFreemanE
    @TFreemanE Před 4 lety +229

    Quite a few details missed out here. The city of Barcelona fell to Franco’s regime before Madrid did. With Sunyol (Barca’s President) assassinated not in Barcelona but at the front line, in the Sierra de Guadarrama; North West of Madrid.

    • @HKPBanuka
      @HKPBanuka Před 2 lety +7

      Feel like you've read Fear and Loathing in Laliga by Sid Lowe

    • @user-bk9ln6tc7z
      @user-bk9ln6tc7z Před 8 měsíci +3

      Madrid ❤️Franco

    • @briancons
      @briancons Před 7 měsíci

      BARCELONA EXPOSED PAYING REFS FROM 2000 UNTIL MESSI LEFT LOL

    • @justaguy895
      @justaguy895 Před 2 měsíci

      dosent change much

  • @Hamza_inayat
    @Hamza_inayat Před 4 lety +221

    Last time I was this early, tifo was not a part of the Athletic, or nothing was sponsored by it, everything orginally appeared on tifo.

    • @Hamza_inayat
      @Hamza_inayat Před 4 lety

      @André Antunes You must be fun at parties?

    • @Hamza_inayat
      @Hamza_inayat Před 4 lety

      @André Antunes i'm joking aswell 🤦‍♂️

  • @luisernestomorales753
    @luisernestomorales753 Před 4 lety +426

    Too many things left unsaid. Like Atletico Aviacion, the Republican presidents of Real Madrid before the Civil War and the amount of titles won by each team during those decades, which clearly shows that Real Madrid being Franco's team is not that simple

    • @maurogonzalez1643
      @maurogonzalez1643 Před 4 lety +14

      The only team in the 40s to travel by plane

    • @Sfx04
      @Sfx04 Před 4 lety +102

      Barca won more trophies than real madrid during franco's reign

    • @luisernestomorales753
      @luisernestomorales753 Před 4 lety +43

      @@Sfx04 exactly thats what I meant

    • @Sfx04
      @Sfx04 Před 4 lety +45

      @@luisernestomorales753 He even helped in funds for their camp nou stadium, talk about principles with cule xD

    • @luisernestomorales753
      @luisernestomorales753 Před 4 lety +40

      @@Sfx04 they will try to have a moral high ground but history shows the opposite

  • @avivlamech-kalambi519
    @avivlamech-kalambi519 Před 4 lety +462

    Why do youth teams occasionally have unpredictable winners(If you were to compare it to the actual World Cup)?
    For example in the finals of the last few u20 World cups:
    Ukraine 3-1 Republic Of Korea
    England 1-0 Venezuela
    Brazil 1-2 Serbia
    For example

    • @eashansaju8106
      @eashansaju8106 Před 4 lety +62

      I would like this video to happen

    • @gavinperry8433
      @gavinperry8433 Před 4 lety +13

      +1 @tifo make this happen

    • @DPAE-xc4ph
      @DPAE-xc4ph Před 4 lety +57

      Mali also do very well in youth tournaments yet almost no football fan could name a Malian player.

    • @avivlamech-kalambi519
      @avivlamech-kalambi519 Před 4 lety +15

      @@DPAE-xc4ph They even reached the final of the u17 wc in Chile. But somehow they have made much of an impact in other competitions. Same with Serbia and Venezuela.

    • @eashansaju8106
      @eashansaju8106 Před 4 lety +4

      @@DPAE-xc4ph Moussa marega

  • @Chris24_
    @Chris24_ Před 4 lety +170

    I urge ANYONE who hasn’t, to read Fear And Loathing in La Liga : Barcelona VS Real Madrid. It gives the best insight into all of this with a very objective view 👌🏻

    • @smrkinjo
      @smrkinjo Před 3 lety +25

      Surely not biased. In a book that says "franco's fascists vs freedom fighters"

    • @Cronhour
      @Cronhour Před 2 lety +29

      @@somebody700 was franco not a facist?

    • @chainsawmanunofficial9403
      @chainsawmanunofficial9403 Před 2 lety +12

      @@smrkinjo or the other's not freedom fighters?

    • @nisrine778
      @nisrine778 Před 2 lety +2

      So if for you being objectif is to say that franco helped RM is you know nothing because is the biggest lie evr

    • @clairofan01
      @clairofan01 Před rokem +3

      @@smrkinjo pretty bold of you to imply franco wasn’t a fascist

  • @sirjackson4002
    @sirjackson4002 Před 4 lety +246

    Maybe Ivica Osim would be an intresting Person to talk about. The Last Coach of the last yugoslavian Team wich could have won the in 1992. A guy Who is respected on the Balcan by all Nations for his football and his approuche to peace

    • @zaszarathustra2258
      @zaszarathustra2258 Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah, they did win the qualification group in front of Denmark, but because of the civil war and the dissolution of Yugoslavia, we got the ticket instead, and ended up going all the way, though we technically didn't even qualify.

    • @sirjackson4002
      @sirjackson4002 Před 4 lety +7

      @@zaszarathustra2258 yeah it is leterally crazy😂
      I know him because of the war he wanted to stay close to his Family so instead of coaching a big Club he came to Austria and had greate success with my hometown Club.

  • @Alberto-xz7th
    @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +69

    0:33 The civil war didn't end on the 10th of February when Barcelona fell to the francoist side. Madrid resisted until the 28th of March 1939 together with much of the southeastern Spain.

    • @tharcisse7103
      @tharcisse7103 Před 4 lety +45

      Exactly. This false narrative the English media are trying to portray to sell our rivalry is ridiculous. Now even historical facts are going out the window. I guess our grandparents were fighting for nothing in Madrid. They were being starved for no reason. Franco was in Madrid handing out food on golden plates for everyone. This is absurd.

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +14

      @@tharcisse7103 I know it's kind of offensive to the people who died in Madrid

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 4 lety +2

      When Barcelona felt there was no chance to win the war so technically civil war was ended. Spanish government was in Barcelona in that moment so Madrid was just waiting for surrender. The history of Real Madrid has been built as part of the Franco's regime propaganda started nearly 60's. Santiago Bernabeu was part of the regime and awarded with the presidency when taking part of the siege of Catalonia with the Fascist Legion.

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +16

      @@billycorgan3934 What are you talking about? The government of Juan Negrin, descendent of the elected governement of 1936 was in Madrid, which is understandable because it's the capital of Spain. The war ended after Casado's coup against Negrin and the occupation of Madrid Valencia and all the rest by Franco. And what kind of argument is it that because the situation for the republicans was desperate after the fall of Catalonia we can consider the war over. Have you ever seen anyone say that D-day is the day WW2 ended, and the foreign governments of allied occupied Germany started their reign? No, obviously. The guys at Tifo Football made a factual mistake, which is fine, I just pointed it out. But the fact that people who have no idea about the history of the civil war would try to defend that is exasperating

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +14

      @@billycorgan3934 Also Santiago Bernabeu became the president of Real Madrid in 1943, not during the offensive of Catalonia in 1939 (offensive, not siege. There's a difference). Jesus Christ can you be more wrong in 3 sentences

  • @abhishekbisht3032
    @abhishekbisht3032 Před 4 lety +129

    Franco must be so proud of Bartomeu

  • @ALEX-ut4pp
    @ALEX-ut4pp Před 4 lety +183

    He was a Atletico Madrid fan and then he realized they were not that good and switched to Real Madrid. It Franco that used Madrid not the other way around besides Real Madrid was the last team that he supported because the other Madrid teams were bad.

    • @shuaibhere
      @shuaibhere Před 4 lety +92

      It's not like real Madrid didn't benefit from it. They're the club now only because Franco helped them

    • @asquared5786
      @asquared5786 Před 4 lety +20

      Mohammed Shuaib sure lad

    • @unstoppableExodia
      @unstoppableExodia Před 4 lety +16

      Mohammed Shuaib yeah rm got a huge leg up from francos support.rm might have already have been in the ascendancy and might not have specifically sought his support but when he did get behind them that came at the expense of every other team in Spain. As I see it taking the help of a fascist dictator makes them complicit in his reign by permitting franco to use their newly acquired prestige for legitimacy amongst European countries. That kinda thing makes me dislike rm.

    • @maurogonzalez1643
      @maurogonzalez1643 Před 4 lety +32

      One has to ask why didn't "franco's team" attain any real success in the 40s which were the hardest years of francoism. Rm almost went down in the 40s. The moniker was RM had a second division side with a first division stadium.

    • @aq8048
      @aq8048 Před 4 lety +19

      @@unstoppableExodia Not to mention he forced Di Stefano to be a Real player instead of a barca one

  • @siu281
    @siu281 Před 4 lety +107

    Ironically Barcelona had one of their most successful period of domestic success when Franco was in power. They won 8 La Liga titles and 9 Copas del Rey during his rule.

    • @genocidejoe
      @genocidejoe Před 4 lety +34

      Somehow barca fans seem to forgett that

    • @lewismcdonald9691
      @lewismcdonald9691 Před 4 lety +10

      Yeah the video should of mentioned that

    • @TiagoAzevedo
      @TiagoAzevedo Před 4 lety +114

      Franco was in power for almost 40 years and Real Madrid outnumbered the trophies won. But hey, in almost 40 Barça won 8 titles so they must be wrong, even after the whole board being killed by a firing squad, forcing the club to change its name, forcing the club to not use Catalan symbols or language, forbidding Barça fans to gather on the streets or club's buildings with the exception of the stadium in match days, the Di Stefano transfer, the 11-1. This is all a product of pure imagination, right?

    • @coldblood008
      @coldblood008 Před 4 lety +7

      8 titles in 40 years

    • @aq8048
      @aq8048 Před 4 lety +13

      in 40 years... AFter Franco Died 6 UCL FInals 21 copas del rey and more than 17 leagues

  • @bjehulk
    @bjehulk Před 4 lety +101

    Interestingly, Paulino Alcántara, a Barcelona legend who was from the Philippines, was arguably Barcelona’s best player pre-Cruyff and was Barcelona’s top scorer until Messi. However, at the breakout of the civil war in Spain, he retired from football and fought under Franco, even becoming a high ranking officer.

    • @philliproe-lara9751
      @philliproe-lara9751 Před rokem +1

      I totally can agree from a Half Filipino culér he was ❤🔥

    • @bjehulk
      @bjehulk Před rokem +2

      @@philliproe-lara9751
      I agree! I am also a half Pinoy culer funnily enough

    • @AA-ot7wu
      @AA-ot7wu Před rokem

      This does not mean anything. Alcántara chose what he thinks is right for him! What FC Barcelona has to do with that?

    • @bjehulk
      @bjehulk Před rokem +4

      @@AA-ot7wu
      Alcántara chose the right side

    • @AA-ot7wu
      @AA-ot7wu Před rokem +9

      @@bjehulk He chose a fascist political organization linked to the Nazis, what right side in his choice!

  • @jmc6893
    @jmc6893 Před 4 lety +327

    Tifo I’d like you to do a video on the Hillsborough disaster maybe to inform some of the things what happened to people so they get a true understanding of it a lot of people on Twitter don’t take it serious anymore and think it’s ok to make jokes about it, also maybe talk about Margaret Thatcher and the suns involvement in it also. It is the anniversary today JF96

    • @B4kerG
      @B4kerG Před 4 lety +8

      Horrible idea

    • @tasfixe6031
      @tasfixe6031 Před 4 lety

      The sun ☀ was involved Hillsborough?

    • @DarkshadeMusic
      @DarkshadeMusic Před 4 lety +6

      Haven't they done something similar in the past? I'm kinda sure of it.

    • @TyEats0031
      @TyEats0031 Před 4 lety +37

      @@B4kerG In what way is it a "horrible idea"? It is the anniversary of the event for one, and it's one of the most tragic days in football history. Many football fans today are I'll informed on the topic and a video explaining it here would be great.

    • @ratedpending
      @ratedpending Před 4 lety +1

      Ninh Ly has a video on it

  • @nathaniel7744
    @nathaniel7744 Před 4 lety +22

    Nobody:
    Barca and Madrid fans:
    arguing about this type of shit when 95% of them in the comments have no actual connection to the spanish civil war or any family roots in Spain.

    • @XDSmiffy
      @XDSmiffy Před 3 lety +3

      Everyone has roots to anti-fascism.

  • @glennb6020
    @glennb6020 Před 4 lety +159

    So much more to cover in this. The writing of Alejandro Quiroga would be useful as you’ve took maybe two quotes and just used general thoughts as your points. Franco had influence on the national side as well as how the channels reported the teams. When Spain beat the USSR Barca players involved in the goals were edited out of the highlights where possible.

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +5

      Do you mean Jesus Pereda's goal in the 1964 European Nations Cup? Can you give me a source on this. I want to read about it but I'm bad at googleing stuff and I can't find anything

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety

      Would you mind giving me a source, or just where you remember you first heard it?

    • @glennb6020
      @glennb6020 Před 4 lety

      Alberto just search for Alejandro quiroga and his profile should appear you can check his publications

    • @Alberto-xz7th
      @Alberto-xz7th Před 4 lety +1

      @@glennb6020 thanks. Is it in goles y banderas?

    • @user-yr6zt5ye7p
      @user-yr6zt5ye7p Před 4 lety +7

      It's not true. Franco made flim about barca's legend kubala. Franco’s government wanted to utilize Kubala’s status as a refugee from one of the URSS satellite countries to reinforce the regime’s validity, thus helping Kubala obtain Spanish citizenship without delay.[9] In the midst of the Cold War, Kubala's escape to the West was used as propaganda by Franco's government and was made into a successful film The Stars Search for Peace which saw Kubala and Samitier playing themselves.

  • @cmchintan
    @cmchintan Před 4 lety +98

    Great timing guys!
    I'm Currently reading Sid Lowe's "Fear and Loathing in La Liga"
    I'd recommend it to everyone who is interested in the football history books in general.
    If I quote the Authors note "this book is about the episodes that have shaped the rivalry and made Real Madrid and FC Barcelona what they are and about the human stories behind them. This is their story."

    • @stevencooke6451
      @stevencooke6451 Před 4 lety +8

      Just read that a few weeks ago. Very interesting book, and doesn't really take one side, but rather gives you information from which to draw conclusions.

    • @keionadams01
      @keionadams01 Před 4 lety +2

      That book is on my list, I just got soccernomics and inverting the pyramid

    • @GenericUserNameHere
      @GenericUserNameHere Před 4 lety +2

      I'm currently reading Di Stefano's biography by Ian Hawkey, in case anyone wanted more reading recs in quarantine.

    • @mhmd127
      @mhmd127 Před rokem

      So the book is about real madrid and barcelona?

  • @amalkc5663
    @amalkc5663 Před rokem +20

    Visca el Barca ❤️💙🔥

  • @iancypes5911
    @iancypes5911 Před 4 lety +69

    Im surprised you guys forgot this, but you didn't mention the stories of Franco restricting La Liga to domestic players only while naturalizing any foreigner signed by Rèal

    • @kurtchester7073
      @kurtchester7073 Před 4 lety

      Exactly.

    • @oe4188
      @oe4188 Před 4 lety +23

      Like Kubala?

    • @ignaciovalero9977
      @ignaciovalero9977 Před 4 lety +7

      Bullshit

    • @darahensey6932
      @darahensey6932 Před 4 lety +4

      Bullshit. That's a complete oversimplification for one thing. For another you should look into Kubala's transfer to Barca.

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 4 lety +1

      @@darahensey6932 he's talking about South American players. They had to prove they had Spanish ancestors to let them play during 60s 70s and there was a big issue because many players got fake documents, they were pretending to be Spanish legitimate players when they weren't. Barça reported because he got Heredia denied when other clubs had illegal players

  • @davidcastaneda1992
    @davidcastaneda1992 Před 4 lety +79

    Tifo, you forgot to mentioned that Franco saved FC Barcelona from financial ruin in 1965. Moreover, this move earned him an "honorary socio" title at the Barcelona in addition to countless honorary medals thereafter.

    • @jesusojeda7850
      @jesusojeda7850 Před 4 lety +61

      At that point Barcelona was "hostage" of Franco's government after Josep Sunyol was killed and a commission chosen by Franco was assigned to preside over the club.

    • @solankijimmy
      @solankijimmy Před 4 lety +12

      @Stats 05 we all know that would have been utterly foolish.

    • @ChrisMeerkat
      @ChrisMeerkat Před 4 lety +2

      You forgot that Franco used currency like a weapon and those that didn't do what he said disappeared forever.

    • @jesusojeda7850
      @jesusojeda7850 Před 4 lety +6

      @Stats 05 Not really for both of your comments. Taking control of the club and helping it was a good way to show goodwill to the region and "pacify" them (or at least not to give them another reason to revolt). Also Barcelona was better than RM before the civil war- if the government just wanted to pick the best team, Real wasn't the prime choice, but it was the best team in the capital thus easiest to control.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Před 4 lety

      nonsense. If it had not been for the efforts of Paddy O'Connell when Barca were more or less black listed (he organized friendlies in South america which basically saved barca from financial ruin) then there wouldn't of been a club to help in 1965.

  • @nope2dat
    @nope2dat Před 4 lety +28

    Sid Lowe made a really interesting comment in the copa 90 video on this about how the history is complicated and you can point to Francoists in Barcelona and left wingers in Real Madrid to dispute it or reinforce it, but that ultimately both clubs want us to keep talking about it because it funnels attention towards them and away from the other 18 teams in la Liga making it seem like Spanish football is just all about el Classico

    • @josea1707
      @josea1707 Před rokem +3

      Yup this is exactly what the correct take is. Coming from a lifelong Barcelona fan, el clásico hasn’t had the same meaning or feeling since the late 90s. It seems much more like a cash grab for foreign fans to enjoy rather than the most legendary rivalry in football.

    • @MGdelOeste
      @MGdelOeste Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@josea1707Being a Spanish born in the mid 90s, and having lived the rivalry since I was a kid (by the way I'm neither from Madrid nor Barcelona/Catalunya) I'm curious, what was the meaning and the feeling the match used to have? Here in my city there are lots of both Madrid and Barça fans. Not a huge difference between them really. Quite a heterogeneus crowd in both sides. It's true there's this prejudice about madridistas being more "fachas", which sometimes it's true.

    • @josea1707
      @josea1707 Před 11 měsíci

      @@MGdelOeste I mean once elephante blu took over barca, they (with florentino) made el clasico more of a spectacle for the profit. This was made even worse by the ronaldo/messi rivalry when el clasico became the game to watch the two best in the world play against each other rather than the most passionate game in spanish club football. Florentino's galacticos felt more foreign than the madrid teams from before and that also added to it with barca and other clubs in europe having more and more foreign players and big name talents.

    • @josea1707
      @josea1707 Před 11 měsíci

      @@MGdelOeste I still love el clasico but it just seems more like a cash grab to me than anything else nowadays.

  • @vPMFreshPrince
    @vPMFreshPrince Před 4 lety +1

    Again man TIFO has not even a been day since I made my last statement praising ur moves lately. Thank you for this one even tho u probably started a few arguments. Great videos!

  • @jorgesebastiandeerice9411
    @jorgesebastiandeerice9411 Před 4 lety +23

    Point number 1: it has never been proved that a men of franco visited barcelona's squad before de 11-1, eventhough, it is true that everybody that was in that game said that the fans were very hostile, throwing things to the players and the barcelona's keeper actually had to leave the goal because of the things people were throwing, allowing real madrid to score more goals.
    Point number 2: Franco was never in real madrid games, just in the important ones, in order to raise concern about spain, using its success to expand spain's name.
    Point number 3: it has been said for years as you said that franco's team was real madrid, but that is not true whatsoever, in the spanish civil war the two strategical places where madrid and cataluña, when the national side won madrid the war was almost over, and winning cataluña was the last thing, but not the detonant. Franco's team was always said to be, by people close to him, his birthplace team racing club de ferrol, now in the 3rd spanish division, and the one that he supported if you had to pick one of the big ones was "Atlético Aviación", this team was financially supoorted by the regime, the club would change its standards, stop receiving money from franco and changed the name, known nowadays as atlético de madrid.
    Point number 4: real madrid crossed blue band in the badge was initially purple, color used by the spanish republic on their flag and color aknoledged to the republic. It is just a rumor the fact that they used it in favor of the republic, and they changed it to blue in 1941, adding the crown because of the regime.
    Point 5: and last, but definitely not least, fc Barcelona was saved from bankruptct by franco. In the 50s, barcelona was growing as a club, and they needed a bigger stadium than "Les corts", they proceeded then to the construction of the camp nou. Nonetheless, the spanish club had a debt of over 200million because of the construction. It was then when Franco requalified the land where they intended to build it. That land was reserved to parks, gardens and other things than stadiums. With this requalification barcelona solved their debt, built the camp nou and didnt disappear.
    In conclusion, in the light of the information mentioned above, omitted mostly over the video, it should be considered that franco was never from real madrid, and did never help them to achieve nothing, otherwise, he used them to enhance the name of spain internationally.

    • @ineednoname3158
      @ineednoname3158 Před 4 lety +6

      I think they intentionally made this video this misleading.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před rokem +3

      This is far from the general opinion. Anyway, why on earth would Barca lose 11-0. It's impossible, esp. after the first leg. Very suspicious, don't you think. Methinks you protest too much.

    • @fuadamsyari6372
      @fuadamsyari6372 Před rokem

      ​@@elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 yes because of the actions of madrid supporters who threw objects at barcelona players so that madrid players could score 11 goals against barcelona
      after all, if the franco regime supported madrid why did they lose in the final and bilbao won at that time?

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před rokem +1

      Nonsense. I read a whole book on this. Real Madrid was Franco's team. No argument. Another example, in addition to the 11-1 win was that Di Stefano wanted to register for Barca, he was herded toward Real.

    • @fuadamsyari6372
      @fuadamsyari6372 Před rokem

      @@elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Oh yes? if you read a whole books can you explain about transfers at Stefano and how franco was involved in it?🤔

  • @Macaroni16.
    @Macaroni16. Před 4 lety +39

    The 1943 Barcelona team doesn't know the Barcelona Vs PSG game. 6-1😮

    • @noahcoleman6385
      @noahcoleman6385 Před 4 lety +24

      Imagine comparing 6-1 to 11-1. 6-1 also resulted through fortunate circumstances. There's no way as mentioned, that the 11-1 took place without any external influences.

    • @devilfriend
      @devilfriend Před 4 lety +4

      I always though the refs favored Barça heavily in the second game.

    • @Asasnol21
      @Asasnol21 Před 4 lety +30

      @@devilfriend imagine comparing refs to an oppresive regime which suppressed the catalan and basquae people to the point that it made their languages illegal.

    • @siu281
      @siu281 Před 4 lety +4

      @@noahcoleman6385 What about the 12-1 loss to Athletic Bilbao? Which 'external influence' intervened in that match?

    • @noahcoleman6385
      @noahcoleman6385 Před 4 lety +4

      @@devilfriend not really, the ref had a bad angle on the suarez penalty, don't blame him there was no var.

  • @marianosolivellas8090
    @marianosolivellas8090 Před rokem +5

    The change of names of clubs was not only for Athletic and Barcelona, all the clubs with english names changed, Rácing, Sporting, etc.

  • @ssvoogel
    @ssvoogel Před 4 lety +9

    Can you do a video on Kaizer Motaung? And the emergence of Kaizer Chiefs, creating a fierce rivalry with Orlando Pirates, and the impact Apartheid had on football in South Africa?

  • @andrewungerer839
    @andrewungerer839 Před 4 lety +52

    I honestly just watch these to gain inspiration to make a career mode on fifa

    • @vidianosdrossos2296
      @vidianosdrossos2296 Před 4 lety +5

      Try getting a histroic team with a very nice ground and team like stuttgart from the 2nd division to the champions league and stuff. Me myself I am playing a player career mode in the pro camera (little difficult but if you get used to it is really nice) as an LM where I started with Stuttgart moved to Bayern won 2 trebles in 6 years and now moved to Hamburg... Just giving ideas 😂

    • @andrewungerer839
      @andrewungerer839 Před 4 lety +1

      @@vidianosdrossos2296 👌👌👌👌 yeah that's sounds awesome tbh Imma do something similar sounds fun

    • @jbo4547
      @jbo4547 Před 4 lety +5

      Football manager*

    • @54356776
      @54356776 Před 4 lety +1

      Lower level clubs are way more fun and interesting. Someone like Madrid gets boring quick.

    • @vidianosdrossos2296
      @vidianosdrossos2296 Před 4 lety +1

      @@54356776 exactly but it also needs to be a kinda big club like hamburg or stuttgart that i've mentioned because I find it a bit ugly taking really small clubs to champions league and stuff

  • @sinanm100
    @sinanm100 Před 4 lety +35

    Real Madrid did not win a single league title during the first 18 years of Franco's regime (1936-1954). Also by the end of his reign in 1975, RM only had one more national title than Barcelona (21-20). That's some weak favoritism if you ask me

    • @alexfreedom3084
      @alexfreedom3084 Před 4 lety +2

      Weak or strong it is called favouritism by fascist Franco , Franco's Real Madrid.

    • @sinanm100
      @sinanm100 Před 4 lety +8

      @@alexfreedom3084 The ONLY title named after Franco is the Copa del Generalísimo [currently Copa del Rey] and it was won by Barca [9] times 3 more than RM [6]

    • @amateurtoyhunter7513
      @amateurtoyhunter7513 Před 4 lety

      Yeah, that's smart. Comparing titles won outside of Franco's reign to the ones in it. Fact is that Madrid won the league title 14 times during Franco's reign compared to only 8 times for Barcelona. Also, if you factor in the Di Stefano transfer, which was clearly down to a Franco appointed minister, then it's still 14 titles for Madrid during Franco's reign but only 3 for Barcelona.

    • @amateurtoyhunter7513
      @amateurtoyhunter7513 Před 4 lety

      @outlawfly Kind of funny how you have to come in and make insults while completely getting the facts wrong.
      First, FIFA backed Barcelona's deal with River Plate. At the time, regardless of where Di Stefano was playing, the player had a contract with River Plate until 1954. Barça agreed a deal with River Plate and Di Stefano moved to Spain before 1954. Again, FIFA backed that deal.
      Second, the deal was blocked in Spain by the Spanish Federation. In White Storm: 101 Years of Real Madrid, Phil Ball writes on page 108 "Unfortunately, FIFA had given their blessing to Barça's deal, so in a sudden flurry of legislation in the Spanish Federation, General Moscard' passed a law banning the further importation of foreign players - effectively blocking any chance of Di Stefano officially turning out for the Catalans." Who was General Moscardo'? Well to quote Ball again, page 96, he was "one of Franco's wartime thugs now promoted to the unlikely position of National Delegate of Sport."
      Third, to further establish the relationship between Madrid and Franco, when General Moscardo' was appointed, this is what Santiago Bernabeu put in a telegram to Moscardo': "It is with honor that I fulfill my first act as president of this club, sending this message of greeting to our illustrious head of sport and heroic soldier of the fatherland..." I won't even go into the fascist element there. To quote Ball again to put this telegram into context, page 97, "The message could not have been clearer. Bernabeu was using the occasion to establish his club's new Francoist credentials, to break ties with any vestiges of its Republican past and invite Moscardo' to join the party" Now this was in 1944, close to ten years before the Di Stefano transfer which Moscardo' blocked initially because the player was headed for Barcelona.
      Fourth, few people know that Di Stefano actually played a few friendlies for Barcelona. Di Stefano himself years later denied that there was an agreement in place for both clubs to share the player. After having already played for Barcelona, Saporta who was Bernabeu's right-hand man, according to Ball, page 108, slipped Di Stefano "a bulky envelope with a decent amount of pesatas inside and a rough-draft contract, indicating the sort of money they were contemplating paying to him.
      Fifth, the claim that Franco's henchmen visited the dressing room makes a lot of sense. For starters, the first leg of that tie was a 3-0 win to Barcelona. So an 11-1 loss in the next leg is highly unlikely much less on the face of it in general. Furthermore, let's provide some more context here. In that first leg 3-0 for Barcelona two of the Madrid players, played quite dirty. One of left his stud imprint on the chest of Barcelona's captain. As a result the crowd in Barcelona booed Madrid. Well after the match Eduardo Teus, a former Madrid goalkeeper who at the time was writing for the pro-Madrid (to this day in fact) publication AS, wrote that the booing "the representatives of Spain" meaning the government itself. Low and behold what happens before the 11-1 second leg? The Barça players were treated to a visit from the Director of State Security, Jose' Finat y Escriva de Romani, the count of Mayalde, where he reminded them that "they were only playing as result of the generosity of the regime that had forgiven their lack of patriotism." Page 95 of the same book which also cites Jimmy Burns' Barça: A People's Passion which I too have read. As for the final against Bilbao, do you homework. There's a story there as well.
      Sixth, as for the trophies, as I already said in the comments here, Madrid won 14 league titles during Franco's time to Barça's 8. Factor in when the trophies were won for even more context, like how many after the Di Stefano transfer and the fact that the regime surely had other focuses in the 1940s.
      Finally, as for Kubala he was bound for a train for Madrid. I'll let you try and figure out the importance of that bit, but I won't hold my breath on that happening. Anyway, try getting your facts straight since you're very clearly wrong about your club's history which so benefited from it's ties to a Fascist dictator such that it otherwise surely wouldn't even closely resemble the club that it is today.

    • @amateurtoyhunter7513
      @amateurtoyhunter7513 Před 4 lety

      @outlawflyI completely refuted many of your points which in fact weren't correct to begin with. Also, they aren't "accusations", they're facts. Biased statements? The main author I cited, who has multiple books on Spanish football including the definitive one, is a self-proclaimed Madrid "fan" after writing the book I referenced. Cherry-picked? Do you want me to post the entire book? At the end of the day you posted a bunch of false statements, insulted me in the process and then came back with this latest weak reply. Little wonder you're a Madrid support only too happy to ignore your club's true history.

  • @TheRobbo007
    @TheRobbo007 Před 4 lety +6

    I’d like to see a video from you guys about the rise and fall of Blackburn Rovers in the 90s.

  • @sohamkulkarni5671
    @sohamkulkarni5671 Před rokem +6

    Who's here after 17/04/23 drama?

  • @jawad1776
    @jawad1776 Před 4 lety +10

    So many things left unsaid in this video, as usual.

  • @destroysword0567
    @destroysword0567 Před 4 lety +36

    Barca couldn't have been that hard to beat, they have a 0-0-4 record against Dundee United after all

    • @marcuslopez4375
      @marcuslopez4375 Před 4 lety +9

      William Rostance Dundee United used to be really good you know

    • @vinosmanuel
      @vinosmanuel Před 3 lety +5

      @@marcuslopez4375 But then, everything changed when the Crocodile Nation attacked.

  • @Ivanovic82
    @Ivanovic82 Před 4 lety +49

    Franco saved Barcelona from going bankrupt and helped financing the Camp Nou. Also, he intervened when Madrid was about to sign Kubala and he finally signed for Barcelona. Just a couple of things worth mentioning as well.

    • @brandonsomo6200
      @brandonsomo6200 Před 3 lety +47

      That was just a cover of what happened in the past lol franco sent italians planes to bomb barcelona , they assasinated barca president Sunyol, Madrid cheated on Di stefano transfert to get him from barcelona when every thing was already dealed

    • @mHANIF-xl3rx
      @mHANIF-xl3rx Před 3 lety +7

      @@brandonsomo6200 well for politics perhaps, but in football if Franco didnt help Barça from bankruptcy, they would probably disband, and gone for good, can't deny he help them in football aspects.

    • @lunarisita26
      @lunarisita26 Před 2 lety

      @@brandonsomo6200 He executed 2 real Madrid presidents, 2!!

    • @lunarisita26
      @lunarisita26 Před 2 lety +11

      And literally all of Spain was bombed...Madrid the first and last.

    • @aeternavictrix7861
      @aeternavictrix7861 Před rokem +3

      @@brandonsomo6200 thats the war though, that’s different. You are not that bright

  • @cannonfoddertv8915
    @cannonfoddertv8915 Před 4 lety +2

    Another interesting and brilliant upload by Tifo Football.

  • @unknownhuman7919
    @unknownhuman7919 Před 4 lety +22

    Franco or not , "Big Clubs" like Real Madrid and others always had advantage over small clubs with weak infrastructure and low budgets to buy these 5 star rated football players.

    • @NR-cu7et
      @NR-cu7et Před 4 lety +5

      Unknown Human But that’s just something that naturally happens. This is very different

    • @vb2388
      @vb2388 Před 4 lety +1

      True..

    • @IRAwhiskey
      @IRAwhiskey Před 4 lety +4

      What has that got to with the video?..this was in the 40s before they even signed di stefano...they werent the big club they are now..
      Real never won a european cup until 1955, two years after they got di stefano

    • @zac5572
      @zac5572 Před 4 lety

      Yeah everyone knows that genius

    • @solankijimmy
      @solankijimmy Před 4 lety +1

      @@NR-cu7et how does it happen "naturally"

  • @faycem
    @faycem Před 4 lety +6

    Franco used Real Madrid to keep his popularity as high as possible. Just as any politician does now. Is insane to think Franco had any influence in Real Madrid’s success. Taking into considerarion the bad relationship the regime had with the rest of europe, he was an obstacle more than anything.

    • @kunalm15
      @kunalm15 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah Madrid were victims of Franco’s financial favours that helped them be such a dominant team 🙄

    • @fuadamsyari6372
      @fuadamsyari6372 Před rokem +5

      ​@@kunalm15 financial aid?
      as far as i know franco erased barca's debt and saved it from bankruptcy at that time so this team is still there today🤭

  • @SkaSkaSkaSkaSka
    @SkaSkaSkaSkaSka Před rokem +5

    Who is here after Madrid’s video saying that Franco was a Culé?

    • @Nick_1790
      @Nick_1790 Před rokem

      Madrid wasn’t claiming that, they were claiming they were not the “regime’s team”

    • @user-mf5ue6rc5n
      @user-mf5ue6rc5n Před rokem +1

      MADIRD =commies

  • @kieranharm745
    @kieranharm745 Před 3 lety +2

    Can we get a video explaining the history and culture of Atletic Bilbao? Would love to know more about that,

  • @MrTaktic121
    @MrTaktic121 Před 4 lety +2

    needs more of a follow up on this

  • @raihanmuhammad6689
    @raihanmuhammad6689 Před 4 lety +6

    Last time I was this early this article originally appeared on the Athletic

  • @abhishrestha7952
    @abhishrestha7952 Před 4 lety +14

    0:13 why is the sponsor Fly Themirates?
    Is it maybe because of copyright?

    • @user-fy1eg2mf8h
      @user-fy1eg2mf8h Před 4 lety

      @Doge No, its because of copyright.

    • @rawsy4769
      @rawsy4769 Před 4 lety +2

      @@user-fy1eg2mf8h It isn't because of copyright it's because they're not going to make free advertising to a multimillionaire company

  • @cloudvargas1995
    @cloudvargas1995 Před 3 lety +11

    yes lets not mention the fact that fact that Franco saved them from bankruptcy in the 50's and had the biggest stadium in Europe built for them, also during the regime they were able to sign players like Kubala and Cruyff, lets also not forget that Barcelona are the only club in Spain to award Franco with two medals.

  • @araguaney911
    @araguaney911 Před rokem +5

    Franco was a President of Honor of FC Barcelona. And they won more Cups of "el generalísimo" so. That can give You an idea

  • @jacknapier2949
    @jacknapier2949 Před 4 lety +28

    A video on the absolute mess in Scotland would be good

  • @Tomanna
    @Tomanna Před 4 lety +33

    When football rivalries actually meant something. All so commercialised now

  • @ShAAnE2010
    @ShAAnE2010 Před 4 lety

    Great music in this video, good work Tifo

  • @FJBF1998
    @FJBF1998 Před 4 lety +92

    If anyone's having a bad day, cheer up by remembering Franco is still dead! :)

    • @isaac7364
      @isaac7364 Před 4 lety +8

      Viva Franco, y Viva España

    • @FJBF1998
      @FJBF1998 Před 4 lety +33

      @@isaac7364 Viva el proletario español, muerte al fascismo!

    • @isaac7364
      @isaac7364 Před 4 lety +2

      @@FJBF1998 Viva el único hombre capaz de poner en alto la patria Española

    • @xavierstassen5847
      @xavierstassen5847 Před 4 lety +24

      @@isaac7364 this is like a Hitler salute to the people whose grandparents were killed by his brutal dictatorship.🤔 Shame on you

    • @joan6839
      @joan6839 Před 4 lety +3

      @@isaac7364 visca la república!! Puta Espanya!!

  • @CM-xt6sk
    @CM-xt6sk Před 4 lety +35

    When you break it down to facts this seems pretty much a myth to me. Below, see the domestic honours of both clubs (La Liga and Cup) during the period (1939-1975) then make your own mind up.
    Real Madrid: 20
    Barcelona: 17

  • @asaraviag
    @asaraviag Před 4 lety +22

    Please look at the Liga’s history first:
    Franco took the power on 1939. Since then to 1954 (15 years!) Real Madrid did no get any Liga (0). Barcelona got 5, At. Madrid got 4 y At. Bilbao got 2. Franco did not like Real at that time. These are facts not lies from Barcelona.
    Real Madrid became a leader thanks to Santiago Bernabéu, who had the ability to build a modern club by convincing international stars to come Madrid to make an incredible team. Once Real became Europe’s king, Franco realised that was a chance to improve International image of Spain.

    • @andresa.j5873
      @andresa.j5873 Před 3 lety

      Of course you say so liar, but also remember that Franco's troops killed Xusep Suñol, a former president of FC Barcelona, additionally it is well known that there was a dark hand that stole Di Stefano from Barcelona. It was a disgraceful intervention and Madrid has always been helped, they are the only club in Champions League to play the competition without winning their local League last year and they even could choose their rivals. Madrid is a dirty corrupt club, they make me puke.

    • @FarrascoGaming
      @FarrascoGaming Před 3 lety

      @@andresa.j5873 relax, those are past.. even if u remove 5 ucl title from real madrid, real still on the top with 8 ucl..

    • @supaa4512
      @supaa4512 Před 3 lety

      @@andresa.j5873 cry

    • @andresa.j5873
      @andresa.j5873 Před 3 lety

      @@supaa4512 hahahaha okay, maybe you'd like my comment if it was about Fortnite or sth like that, virgin.

  • @LucaGarzeli
    @LucaGarzeli Před 4 lety +10

    The Di Stefano's Madrid - Barcelona affair changed the history of football, undoubtedly. Before that moment, Real Madrid only won 2 titles in 14 years since dictatorship began. Once Di Stefano arrived to Madrid, they started to win trophies wildly: they won the 1953 league 20 years after their last spanish league & in 1955 the Real Madrid's chairman created the european champions cup for first time, with Di Stefano in his prime. I don't want to talk about politic here, because the spanish issue is very deep, but the presence of Franco was obviously crucial for these countries that fighted to keep their language and traditions alive, as Catalonia or Pays Basque. You can check, for example, how Franco's army killed the chairman Josep Sunyol in 1936 or put Marqués de la Mesa de Asta, related to regime, as a Chairman of FCB in 1940 in order to control Catalonia throught the football. As Mussolini did with Italia in 1934/1938, football was used in Spain with the same intentions, and as a dictator, you prefer to boost a team that reflect the regime's ideas, and show Europe how strong you are winning european cups.

  • @bdt5096
    @bdt5096 Před 4 lety +4

    4:51 not the last time Barcelona would bottle a 3-0 lead

  • @TheRipperxX9
    @TheRipperxX9 Před 4 lety +5

    MY PERSPECTIVE AS A MADRID NATIVE. I’m from Madrid and I can assure you most of the accusations of supposed favoritism towards Real Madrid are based on little to no evidence. Real Madrid had been the most successful team in Spain for years! Even during the Republic. What people got to understand is that success is the main of our values. It’s always been. Madrid’s always looking for the best players, and making the best economic decisions and gets along with the authorities and Madrids citizens. Sometimes you see players that come to Real as stars and struggle to get individual success due to the insane level of expectations from the fans, coaches, etc. We’re a team that’s used to win and failure is not an option. It’s hard for us the fans to see players struggle at Madrid and not get the recognition they deserve given the fact that we all know how good they are. Those core values simply aren’t present on most football teams, inside or outside of Spain. The partners represent what the club is and it’s mindset is usually passed down from generation to generation. So it’s no coincidence that Madrid is the most successful football team ever in history, let alone Spain, and it’s also no coincidence that the success brings up a lot of made up accusations, even today, most with no basis whatsoever, even though only during a few years the team was influenced by Franco’s regime.

    • @revanthsana9011
      @revanthsana9011 Před rokem +1

      That influenced time got you more trophies😆Even stealing players from other teams, assassinating Catalan Barcelona president

  • @sergiocachineroblanco128
    @sergiocachineroblanco128 Před 4 lety +12

    You couldn't be more wrong. Franco team was Atlético Aviación (now Atlético de Madrid), but it is true that Franco like any other politic tried to make other's victories his victories and tried to use real madrid for propaganda. Also, wasn't Barcelona the last stand against Franco in the civil war, neither Basque country, it was actually Madrid, and Madrid suffered more deaths by the fascists that any other region in Spain.
    Sport and rivalry between Real Madrid and Barcelona have been there for ever, but it is just sport rivalry. Politicians are using these teams for propaganda, even changing the real history of the events. And many people, like you Tifo Football, had fallen into that a of lies and believed the story you just told in this video. These are probably the best teams in the world, and given many of the most exciting matches in the football history, let them just play and enjoy watching them play, don't mix sport and politics, but if you do check first.

  • @S.C08
    @S.C08 Před rokem +2

    Great time to watch this video

  • @liamjenkins6529
    @liamjenkins6529 Před 4 lety

    Love the videos

  • @AlexGarcia-nt5uh
    @AlexGarcia-nt5uh Před 4 lety +3

    FC Barcelona and Real Madrid CF have been always used by politicians and governors ( dictators or non dictators) in their own interests . For instance , Real Madrid was forced to remove the name "Real" from its name during the II Republic . Franco took advantage of course of Real Madrid because he saw that Real Madrid was the best team at the end of the 50s , but he would have done the same with FC Barcelona /Atletico de Madrid/Athletic Club if that was the case . Franco just needed something to show Spain to the rest of the world and to reaffirm his regime in Spain . In fact , during his dictatorship , Athletic Club was the most popular team in Spain because there were no foreigners playing in it and that was something applauded by the regime . But this is more than 50 years ago and the sad thing is that even today some politicians still use these 2 teams to earn votes .

  • @BabsW
    @BabsW Před 4 lety +4

    Please do a video on why Real Madrid's Galacticos failed

  • @nebulagenie
    @nebulagenie Před 4 lety +2

    Love how you included actual quotes and provided references, also appreciate the unbiased presentation. 👏🏿

    • @juanpadilla3613
      @juanpadilla3613 Před 4 lety

      Koffi T this whole video is pointless!! False propaganda!! Do some research!! Franco was a atlético avacion fan! Now known as Atlético de Madrid !!

  • @TheKronicspider
    @TheKronicspider Před 3 lety +8

    In the 3-0 story they left out how the referee under the pressure of the huge crowd of Les Cortes that was never seen before, my dad who lived in that era told me the story, they made alot dubious decisions that marked the game in Barcelona's favour. Read the papers of the era and what they say and some of the comments of the players concerning that game. The fans showed up on Chamartín with whissels in protest of what had gone down in that first match. This video is well done but shows very little insight on the subject, they don't mention how Franco wiped clean Barcelona's large debt they had for the construction of Camp Nou, which left them on the verge of bankruptcy, as well as how he appointed all the directors of all the clubs on Spain, including Barcelona not only Madrid. How before DiStefano, Franco arranged the paper work to nationalize (something unheard of at that time) Kubala so Barcelona could sign the best player in the world at the moment. How it took Madrid 15 years since his take of power to win the first domestic trophy, how he dismantled the RM team claiming the players were from the red side of the conflict. In his years of power Barcelona won more national trophies than RM, which proves that he didn't favor RM, a man with his strong hold of the country wouldn't have done such a bad job if that was the case. Also how Barcelona commemorated him not once but twice with their gold medal of Honor, one awarded as late as 1971, and which he held until only a few years ago. RM were lucky the European Cup came into play because Franco could not manipulate in European soil because Franco at that moment was favoring teams like Barcelona and Bilbao using them as a propaganda tool to keep those conflict zones somewhat happy and controled. When RM started winning in Europe he obviously took advantage of the media that came with it and used it to his favor. He also didn't come into play with the DiStefano signing, that was arbitrated by a FiFa.
    Barcelona pulled back because they had wanted DiStefano as a replacement for Kubala who had contracted Tuberculosis, and they thought he would never be able to play again, but once recovered, and after a bad year from DiStefano they pulled out.
    We have to understand the situation lived on that era no one could oppose Franco, but that doesn't change the fact that history shows that Franco didn't favour RM over Barcelona.

  • @JR-mk6ow
    @JR-mk6ow Před 4 lety +31

    There was a similar story in Portugal with Benfica and Salazar (a dictator). Basically he wanted Benfica to be a great club so it could gather prestige and reputation for Portugal in European competitions.
    It wasn't uncommon for Benfica games to last until they scored the winning goal: even if the game had more 2 hours of injury time! (usually the ref would start giving up red cards to the other team)

  • @alvaro4867
    @alvaro4867 Před 4 lety +9

    Franco was an Atletico fan.

  • @pedroct6640
    @pedroct6640 Před 4 lety +2

    Now the Porto fans will demand the same video about Benfica and Salazar.

  • @ratedpending
    @ratedpending Před 4 lety

    Oh this the type of Tifo x Athletic content we be getting now I seeee you

  • @GEO_________________________24

    One of my favourite video from Tifo.

  • @joseangelrobleto7370
    @joseangelrobleto7370 Před 4 lety +4

    Just saw the video on Ghana in 2010's WC and that got me thinking you should do a video in Costa Rica's 2014 WC run. It'd be really interesting to hear your take on how an organized defensive block, a superb offside trap, and Navas' performances nearly got a team without a single world-renowned player to the semifinal.
    And you might also find it interesting how CONCACAF's questionable decision to continue playing a match in Denver against the USA was a turning point in the road to Brazil 2014 for them

  • @barryb90
    @barryb90 Před 4 lety +1

    Can you do a video on the Shamrock Rovers XI (United Ireland) v Brazil?

  • @Abdi-libaax
    @Abdi-libaax Před 4 lety +1

    He won 5 championship leagues in a row 👏

  • @muchachol
    @muchachol Před 4 lety +50

    Atlético Aviación was the team of the army. Later on turned into Atlético de Madrid.
    Real Madrid was never the team of the regime. Santiago Bernabéu did not stand fascists.
    The Spanish Civil War was not Spain vs Catalonia as some may think... It was Republicans vs Fascists. There were republicans and fascists in Catalonia and the rest of the regions of Spain.
    Madrid was the last city captured by the fascist army.
    Barcelona won more Copas del Generalísimo (current Copa de Rey) than Real Madrid. If Franco favoured Real Madrid why Barcelona won more Cups than Real Madrid during the dictatorship? Franco himself handed the Cup to the winner of Copa del Generalísimo.
    Di Stefano belonged to River Plate and Millonarios. Barcelona reached a deal with River Plate, and Real Madrid with Millonarios. The FIFA took a Solomonic decision. He would play one year for each club. Barcelona prefered to sell their rights instead of "sharing" Di Stefano with Real Madrid.
    Kubala played for Barcelona because Franco helped them to sign him. He later used Kubala as anti-communist propaganda.
    Franco helped Barcelona when the club was bankrupt in 1951 and 1965.
    Franco also helped Barcelona to build Palau Blaugrana and Palacio de Hielo. He was named President of honor of both buildings.
    Franco was also awarded with FC Barcelona's gold medal for his benevolence towards the club.
    These are facts, not gossip.

  • @sandroballester12
    @sandroballester12 Před 4 lety +13

    my question to farsa supporters if franco favored real madrid where the hell was he in 1940 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 where barcelona athletic bilbao sevilla where winning the league and cup madrid didn't starting winning till Di stefano and why were someof the founders of RealMadrid were catlan (padron brothers) and why did franco loan money to barcelona to construct the nou camp and refused Madrid any loans to construct the bernabeu?

    • @amateurtoyhunter7513
      @amateurtoyhunter7513 Před 4 lety +6

      Wild guess, he was focused on other things since it was post revolution and WWII was going on. Anyway, yeah, Di Stefano, who became a Madrid player because a Franco appointed minister said the two clubs had to share the player and Barcelona rightly refused to do so. Di Stefano is the main point if you actually know what you're talking about.

    • @darahensey6932
      @darahensey6932 Před 4 lety

      @@amateurtoyhunter7513 Look into the transfer of Kubala to Barcelona a few years before the di Stefano transfer. Similar story - just the opposite way around.

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 4 lety

      Spain was deep into shit in that time. People was harvested. And the European Cup was part of the regime's propaganda started at lates 50's and 60s. Madrid never was at same level like Barça. Its just when they robbed Di Stéfano to Barça when they started setting the European Cup. Why didn't they set this title during the 40s?
      Madrid was founded at the beginning of the century so Franco didn't exist. You're repeating Franco's propaganda all the time. Camp Nou was built with member fees of several years in beforehand. In comparison with Santiago Bernabeu that was built with public taxes. Don't you see there was a dictatorship? Barça fought against Franco. Barça president was killed by fascists. Why Franco was going to pay anything to Barcelona?

    • @darahensey6932
      @darahensey6932 Před 4 lety

      @@billycorgan3934 You're not making much sense - obviously there was a dictatorship but how did Barça fight against the dictatorship? Their president was killed but it's a big club there were obviously many left -wing and many right-wing members. The club didn't fight the regime. Real Madrid had a left-wing president during the civil war too and he fled into exile. How could Madrid win the European Cup in the 40's - it didn't exist? The European Cup came into existence after di Stefano's signing which happened after. Kubala's signing for Barça which was also done with the help of Franco's government (as well as Barça's agent getting him drunk and telling he was in Madrid). How is it Franco's propaganda to say he didn't help Madrid? It would glorify him to say he created the best team in the world. Madrid have had a communist president since Franco died - when was the last time Barça had anything but a right-wing president?

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 4 lety

      @@darahensey6932 the club was managed by a politician from The Catalan government... So it makes no sense your argument... The club fought against Franco as most of the catalan people did. Why Fascists were going to kill president Sunyol if Barça wasn't an enemy? 😂
      Because Real Madrid was a bullshit in the 40s so there was no reason to set any European Cup.. Do you understand? This Cup was just part of the regime's propaganda did like Soviet Union And Nazis did... Its simple. They created this tournament when they robbed Di Stéfano to Barça... You just repeat the Franco propaganda. Madrid had a communist president when Franco Died in 1975? Are you sick or ignorant?

  • @Yami1300
    @Yami1300 Před 24 dny +1

    In the 60s Real had Di Stefano,Puskas,Kopa and Gento
    Wow
    I wonder why they were successful

  • @goncalofernandes6422
    @goncalofernandes6422 Před 4 lety

    Same thing happened here in neighboring Portugal, with Benfica

  • @JulioLeonFandinho
    @JulioLeonFandinho Před 4 lety +15

    Every regime uses football (and other sports) to their benefit... What I find impossible to explain from Franco's influence conspiracy theories is how Real Madrid won 5 European Cups in a row. I can't see how Franco would influence the rest of european football federations and institutions in order to get that amazing achievement.
    I'd say even more, simply by watching that team playing, everyone would realize that they were the best team.
    Besides, Franco's regime supported Catalonia and Basque Country, the regime made possible for those regions to develop economically and that's why they're the 2 richer spanish regions now. Nationalists of course have another discourse, but after all, Camp Nou was built thanks to Franco.
    So, what did the dictator was just taking political advantage from football, he knew it was the most effective opium of the people, and he tried to push it specially on the most important and populated regions of Spain. There's nothing misterious or conpiranoic about that, it's classic politics there

    • @54356776
      @54356776 Před 4 lety

      Yep. Just typical resentment and jealousy from other teams as usual.

    • @billycorgan3934
      @billycorgan3934 Před 3 lety

      You're just the typical Fascist so...
      It's simply. You ignore the European campaign launched by Delegación Nacional de Deportes on 1956 which Real Madrid was part of that propaganda as Benfica did in Portugal. Real Madrid was the European Cup founder. And the Spanish Association was the most(and still) important at the time at Uefa. Just see all irregularities happened during that European Cup editions. Before the robbery of Di Stéfano Real was a decadent team on Bernabeu's management. Its only when the Regime intervined on Di Alfredo robbery when they started to win and regime swapped Atlético to support Real. Its so Fascist to say Catalonia and Basque were supported by Franco since The Spanish Republic government moved to Barcelona during the war... And they are not rich thanks to Franco. They became richer when the Industrial revolution centuries ago but Fascists like you are ignorants and liars. It's all the time your narrative the Franchoist crap. Camp Nou was built with the members funds not like Bernabeu stadium paid with public funds as it was conceived as a National stadium.

    • @54356776
      @54356776 Před 3 lety

      @@billycorgan3934
      I just saw a facist on Facebook. They tried to deny that they were but it's so obvious isn't it ?

    • @JulioLeonFandinho
      @JulioLeonFandinho Před 3 lety +3

      @@billycorgan3934 You're as d**b as it possibly somebody can be. The prove is that you come here calling fascist to everybody and speaking nonsense about the influence of Real Madrid and Franco in european football and the myth of Di Stefano robbery. You don't understand anything. Di Stefano wasn't robbed, he was an employee of Millonarios. There's nothing more to say. The player rights belonged to Millonarios, Barcelona made a mistake asking to River Plate. Di Stefano wasn't a River Plate player. It's not that difficult to understand, it's kindergarten level. You get it? the guy was property of a colombian club named Millonarios de Bogotá. End of story...
      and then you started to talk rubbish about the narrative of francoist crap and all. First of all, the 'narrative' is called History and it's not a tale narrated. Secondly, it's not a tale told because there's documents, proofs regarding that issue. Catalonia region was economically important and Franco and his regime pushed economics there because it was the rational thing to do. That includes promoting good relationships with local burgueoisie and, amongst other issues, pushing football, so Francoist regime procceed to built Nou Camp. You understand now? It's a FACT, it's not debatable...
      And you can keep to yourself your "narrative" and all that post-modern crap language, and start to study History a little...

  • @kurtchester7073
    @kurtchester7073 Před 4 lety +6

    The signing of Di Stefano says everything.

  • @Reggaeshark.
    @Reggaeshark. Před 4 lety

    WE NEED A TIFO ON T&T GETTING TO 2006 WORLD CUP. So much has been made, and rightly so, of Iceland being a small nation at the World Cup but T&T previously held that title. It is an amazing story including a white Brit that scored an important goal in our playoff against Bahrain to qualify. Legendary player Dwight Yorke was the Captain. This story is a must!!!

  • @amrfoda4442
    @amrfoda4442 Před 4 lety

    Hey maybe you could add to the caption arabic
    Keep the good work 👏👏👏👏

  • @goncaloribeiro6192
    @goncaloribeiro6192 Před 4 lety +9

    Similar dynamic to FCPorto and SLBenfica

    • @DB-lo1iy
      @DB-lo1iy Před 4 lety

      podemos mesmo dizer que à escala, o benfica é o real madrid e o porto, o barcelona.

    • @goncaloribeiro6192
      @goncaloribeiro6192 Před 4 lety

      @@DB-lo1iy Definitivamente. Apesar de muita gente não perceber essa vertente socio-económica do clássico. A cultura do Porto também se faz por oposição ao centralismo lisboeta (vê-se por exemplo no "quem não salta é lampião" em todos os jogos)

    • @DB-lo1iy
      @DB-lo1iy Před 4 lety

      Gonçalo Ribeiro sim, não querendo menosprezar o enorme clube que é o FCP, sente-se o complexo de inferioridade tal como do barcelona para com o real madrid. penso também que é justo neste momento comparar o sporting de braga ao atlético de madrid.

    • @goncaloribeiro6192
      @goncaloribeiro6192 Před 4 lety

      @@DB-lo1iy hmm, interessante. Sim, creio que pode haver uma vitimização por parte adeptos do FCP (nos quais me incluo) relativamente ao Benfica. Acho que essa vitimização até se tem acentuado recentemente por causa de situações extra desportivas: caso dos túneis, etoupeira, opa, dinâmica com o Jorge Mendes...De qualquer forma ser anti "regime" implica logo uma situação de inferioridade.
      Quanto ao Braga, acho que a comparação só é valida em termos desportivos, mas não sei muito sobre o Braga

    • @DB-lo1iy
      @DB-lo1iy Před 4 lety

      Gonçalo Ribeiro aprecio sempre um adepto imparcial. é importante reconhecer que não há clubes santos e que o meu benfica, não é exceção. muitas das queixas dos adeptos portistas são fundamentadas tal como algumas dos benfiquistas.
      relativamente ao braga, é mesmo a nível desportivo. a nível histórico seria o sporting mas pela falta de nível competitivo atual, não me parece comparável.

  • @randalljr17
    @randalljr17 Před 4 lety +7

    Yes and even with Perez, the corruption continues. Don’t know how people could blast at Juventus Man United and Barcelona but no one bats an eye at Real Madrid. They had a dictator lining the league and titles for them. Kids that hop on the bandwagon don’t even realize this dirty history.

    • @flop1272
      @flop1272 Před 4 lety +4

      This has to be one of the dumbest comments I’ve ever read in my life, congrats!

  • @roberthasudungan1546
    @roberthasudungan1546 Před 4 lety +2

    if Franco was alive in 2010, he would got heart attack when he read the Spain's line up. Midfielders were Xabi Alonso (Basque), Sergio Busquets (Catalan), Xavi (Catalan), Iniesta (Catalan)

  • @diogoteixeira7917
    @diogoteixeira7917 Před 3 lety +1

    Make one about SL Benfica and Salazar

  • @Brunix7000
    @Brunix7000 Před 4 lety +15

    Leaving key details out, such as Franco sending key industries to help catalonia and basque country rebuild, as well as him bailing out barcelona for the construction of the camp nou. Franco didn’t even like football, was just politically savvy

    • @edwardthomas4654
      @edwardthomas4654 Před 4 lety +8

      This is true. I love Tifo but sometimes I wonder if there are agendas involved as certain important details and facts are omitted to fit a narrative. Just want to see fair analysis...and I prefer Barcelona to Real 😂.

    • @Brunix7000
      @Brunix7000 Před 4 lety +4

      David Clinging sad to see someone get carried away and blinded by your hooligan eyes. Read about how textile and iron industries grew artificially in those regions in the Spanish state of autarky, and impeding other regions to compete. He hated the catalans right? That’s why international expos in Spain could only be held in Catalonia or Valencia from 1943 until way past his death! He hated the radical, secessionist ideologies these regiona had but boosted their productivity. The south has better mining resources but no let’s start that up in the basque country. Keep living in your fantasy world of conspiracy theories and ignore the historical facts...

    • @Brunix7000
      @Brunix7000 Před 4 lety +4

      David Clinging ah yes the old “you disagree with me, hence you’re a fascist”, should update your repertoire for next time

    • @Brunix7000
      @Brunix7000 Před 4 lety +4

      David Clinging cry me a river

  • @luismanueluseroliso7683
    @luismanueluseroliso7683 Před rokem +4

    Increible que se sigan produciendo videos como este. El Real Madrid no tuvo éxito por ser el equipo del régimen, ni sus actuales éxitos (14 veces campeón de europa) se deben a la política. Son ganas de retorcer la verdad a base de victimismo y mentiras, algo en lo que los barcelonistas son maestros. No es extraño que ésta sea una producción inglesa. Como siempre alentando cualquier forma de leyenda negra antiespañola.

    • @allanadielrojaspaiz6367
      @allanadielrojaspaiz6367 Před rokem

      Ambos clubes se están disparando en el pie con esa vaina de su Supermierdaliga, si siguen así prepárense para ver a la premier y el streaming tener más relevancia que La liga, un saludito a Mr Tebas ;)

  • @miguelteixeira6323
    @miguelteixeira6323 Před 4 lety +2

    Just don't forget Sport Lisboa e Benfica and Salazar in Portugal. 3 titles for SLB and other for another club, then another 3 titles for SLB, etc...

  • @giorgioelgar2272
    @giorgioelgar2272 Před 3 lety +1

    Incredibly unlikely that the transfer fall through was a coincidence particularly with the fact it was from Argentina which were very pro faschist at the time

  • @DudeWatIsThis
    @DudeWatIsThis Před 4 lety +2

    0:31 *What the fuck did I just hear?*
    His dictatorship began when he took over Madrid, dude. This was a Civil War, it ended when he marched on the capital. Kinda makes sense, huh?
    There's this Catalonian independence movement trying to twist this to make it look like a "Spain vs Catalonia" conflict, when in reality Madrid was the city that stood until the very end, even after your country recognized Franco's claim to the government as legitimate. You could have easily checked fucking Wikipedia instead some Catalonian nationalist friend you have on facebook for this information.

  • @pwc000
    @pwc000 Před 4 lety +9

    Brilliant video. Great content. The nuance is on a different level. I wanted to add that the assassination of Barcelona's president, Josep Sunyol, came when he crossed over from the republican to the nationalist side in Madrid, and the Real Madrid president himself at the time, Rafael Guerra, who rejected Franco was exiled to France. I urge all to read Sid Lowe's book mentioned in the video "Fear and Loathing in La Liga". As a Madrid fan for 20 years and a staunch antifascist, it had me in tears.
    The fact that there were nationalist and republican areas in Madrid reflected on the fact that the biggest battles of the civil war in Spain were in Madrid. There was less fighting in other areas which also acted as places of refuge, not just fighting. Vicente Del Bosque's parents were left-wing trade unionists and his father was imprisoned for 3 years in one of Franco's prison camps. Just a small titbit in Sid's great book.

  • @mayank7103
    @mayank7103 Před 4 lety +1

    Last time I was this early Tifo was uMaxit.

  • @neto1889
    @neto1889 Před rokem

    You should make a video of how franco got four medals from Barcelona and how franco have them the Land to build the stadium

  • @eganburg
    @eganburg Před 4 lety +7

    Well Barca dominated the Copa del Generalísimo (CDR now) in Franco's years... Really doubt that if he really the one pulling strings in spanish football, he would allow a catalan club to win a cup that named after his title

  • @ramshacklealex7772
    @ramshacklealex7772 Před 4 lety +3

    I don't think it should be overlooked that Santiago Bernabéu fought for the Nationalists (ie, the Fascists) in the Spanish Civil War

    • @alexfreedom3084
      @alexfreedom3084 Před 4 lety

      Yes Santiago Bernbeu is one of the fascist Franco fighters .

    • @TheRipperxX9
      @TheRipperxX9 Před 4 lety +1

      What a simplistic way to put a label on who the people involved in the fight against the communist-driven republic were. Most liberals, conservatives, people of faith, democrats and many intelectuals fought for or supported the Nationalist side. Spain was being turned into a small USSR in Europe and I can assure you that not only Franco hated communism.

    • @ramshacklealex7772
      @ramshacklealex7772 Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheRipperxX9 The republic was not communist driven. The government that was in power at the time of the coup was generally socialist and the Republicans were a coalition of socialists, liberals, democrats, communists, most artists andrea intellectuals, and communitarian and syndicalist anarchists fighting against an explicitly authoritarian military coup. Yes, some of the Nationalists would have considered themselves conservatives or royalists rather than fascists, but they were serving what was an unambiguously authoritarian and ultimately fascist cause in opposition to the democratic republic.

    • @TheRipperxX9
      @TheRipperxX9 Před 4 lety +1

      Ramshackle Alex oh now the Republican government at the time wasn’t communist. You should tell that to the thousands of people of faith including both my grand-grandparents that were murdered sistematically just because they attended church. Honestly I don’t know where you’re from but you have a very distorted vision of the actual events that happaned during the Spanish Civil War. I’ve studied it for years and I’m not one-sided, I just can’t bare the fact that you believe that the Frente Popular that basically kidnapped the Republic wasn’t communist. That’s just a joke buddy

  • @Eudaimaniac88
    @Eudaimaniac88 Před rokem

    A good time to revisit this video, I suppose .

  • @olivierschaap2580
    @olivierschaap2580 Před 4 lety +1

    Amazing video have always felt like this era and this idea of real Madrid only winning back then because of support of the state has been exagerated, misunderstood and been more about real vs barca. Finally a good video that can be used to show people the facts and what we know about that time

  • @IrvineBrooks
    @IrvineBrooks Před 4 lety +12

    Actually Barcelona was the club that wins more leagues in Franco Dictatorial Period, Franc9 only use Madrid as a example of the spanish superiority afther they won the 5 cups of europe.
    Franco hate the Monarchy so he forced all clubs that had the word "real" in his name to take it away.
    But the club for which Franco professed his love was the Atletico de Madrid.

    • @archie8984
      @archie8984 Před rokem +2

      Franco was a monarchist lmfao

    • @leslierutabayiro
      @leslierutabayiro Před rokem +6

      @@archie8984 how, when he literally groomed Juan Carlos into being his successor lmao. then, Juan Carlos betrayed him and switched to monarchy.

  • @RaquelSantos-ci7hz
    @RaquelSantos-ci7hz Před 4 lety +4

    You should do one about Benfica corruption today and their history of being advantaged by Salazar

    • @DB-lo1iy
      @DB-lo1iy Před 4 lety

      talvez fosse melhor primeiro falar sobre o único caso de corrupção punido em portugal, o apito dourado.

    • @RaquelSantos-ci7hz
      @RaquelSantos-ci7hz Před 4 lety

      DB7 mas este ainda está para resolver e a provas assírias que realmente levam corrupção no futebol a outro nível o ponto de estar envolvido em quase todo de tribunais a política. E também como portista embora não haja evidência para serem punidos eu sei que fizeram coisas que não deviam e e pena porque mesmo sem os árbitros o porto teria limpado com todo e por isso que fomos campeãos de Europa por ter boas equipas que com certeza não teriam problema nenhum em Portugal

    • @DB-lo1iy
      @DB-lo1iy Před 4 lety

      Raquel Santos da mesma forma que o benfica nunca chegaria a duas finais da liga europa se fosse só corrupção. não há clubes santos, o importante é que as pessoas se apercebam disso.

    • @RaquelSantos-ci7hz
      @RaquelSantos-ci7hz Před 4 lety

      DB7 sim mas não ganhariam, e também não é como o porto só ganhasse especialmente aquele ano do Boavista que palhaçada é o Benfica ganhão alguns clássicos

    • @RaquelSantos-ci7hz
      @RaquelSantos-ci7hz Před 4 lety

      Santo o porto não é e é pena porque acho que nada teria sido differente para ser sincera

  • @martinmcmartinezface4243
    @martinmcmartinezface4243 Před 3 lety +2

    This is strongly biased, I would not recommend it to anyone who want to learn about this topic. Incorrect facts, relevant facts omitted, and lots of misinformation.

  • @tcmcity51
    @tcmcity51 Před 2 lety +1

    The Di Stefano situations is the clearest proof

  • @YrbRMA
    @YrbRMA Před 3 lety +49

    Franco directly saved Barcelona from a total bankrupt revaluing their field for nothing just to save them. Also Barcelona win more national titles between leagues and cups during Franco's regime. When the war ended most of the regime more relevant personalities were direct supporters of Atlético de Aviación (old name of Atlético de Madrid). Millan-Astray a famous person in Franco's regime wanted to kill the famous Real Madrid president Santiago Bernabéu after he denies him to went to the stadium after a bad behaviour with a woman. Saddly Franco died on his bed and there weren't something like a team against the regime, Franco was cheered in Barcelona streets, same as in Madrid, Bilbao or Seville, everywhere, and every team due to the fear. Also the fact is that Madrid city fight 3 years against Franco with the Republican elites running to Valencia, with the famous phrase "No pasarán". These are facts that foreign people don't know, the history of Madrid as Franco's team was made by Barcelona during their early success to discredit the old European cups of Real Madrid, yes, Europe where Franco hadn't any power, there was were Madrid made the difference between us and Barcelona. Also in Di Stefano's case as Madrid bought the part of Millonarios and Barcelona the part of River Plate, the official solution was that he will play one year in Madrid and the other in Barcelona but Barcelona refuses and sold his part, but for example when signing Kubala (the main star of Barcelona in the 50s and a true football legend) Madrid also were there and in that case the solution were in favour of Barcelona.
    Everyone can check this facts (maybe you'll need to know some Spanish for some of them).

    • @IvanHernandez-ws5xi
      @IvanHernandez-ws5xi Před 3 lety +16

      True, history has been manipulated by Catalans as always by their oligarchy to create their ficticial and historical nosense state. They've manipulated historical archives from Valencia etc. It's not Catalan people fault by they have a strong nationalist propaganda that tends to victimice them always, I think it's kind of sad when the city of Barcelona was built with every Spaniard money during the Olympic Games and the Expos...

    • @hervas4523
      @hervas4523 Před 3 lety +10

      True, they start that false narrative since their early success, first to discredit Madrid old titles and second to victimize themselves so they could make independist propaganda around Europe while their golden generation (Messi, Xavi, Iniesta etc.) Sad, politics should be apart in football.

    • @YrbRMA
      @YrbRMA Před 3 lety +1

      @@IvanHernandez-ws5xi That is another argument, but in football they don't have the reason at all

    • @YrbRMA
      @YrbRMA Před 3 lety +3

      @@hervas4523 Yeah, same case, Di Stefano was the best player in his era and an Argentinian that brings glory to Madrid and his team was used by Franco to wash his image in Europe, same as Catalan government did with Barcelona and Messi best player in his era and also an Argentinian who brings glory to Barcelona.

    • @YrbRMA
      @YrbRMA Před 3 lety +1

      @Mikel Garmendia true

  • @elodbalazs6820
    @elodbalazs6820 Před 4 lety +7

    Unbelievable how you stick to the politically correct perspective, instead of digging deeper and trying to tell the truth. The statement that the circumstances around the 11-1 are only rumours.. that's ridiculous.

    • @jbo4547
      @jbo4547 Před 4 lety +1

      Rumours as in first hand accounts? Lol, come on

    • @elodbalazs6820
      @elodbalazs6820 Před 4 lety

      No, I meant the opposite. If they'd talk about the truth, they'd be called Barca fans. This perspective helps Tifo to remain neutral as they need to be in this totally commercialised football world. Othervise they risk to lose some Madrid fans which wouldn't help of course.

  • @josemou6172
    @josemou6172 Před 4 lety +1

    During Franco's era 1939-1975:
    LaLiga Winners:
    14x Real Madrid
    8x Barcelona
    7x Atletico Madrid
    4x Valencia
    2x Atletico Bilbao
    1x Sevilla
    Copa Del Rey Winners:
    9x Barcelona
    9x Atletic Bilbao
    6x Real Madrid
    4x Atletico Madrid
    4x Valencia
    2x Real Zaragoza
    2x Sevilla
    1x Espanyol
    Madrid also won 6x European Cup with Di stefano, puskas and gento. They were the best in europe so 14x laliga is no surprise. Franco didnt help them, or else they would have 30/36 laliga at least.
    Also why were barca so successful under franco if he hated them so much and really interfered with football?

  • @lvrs1
    @lvrs1 Před 4 lety

    Like Benfica and Sporting are Salazar's team, and Porto are golden whistle's team.