On May 10, Bernd Schuster's Getafe thrashed a woeful Barcelona 4-0 in the second leg of their King's Cup semifinal, making good a 5-2 defeat in the first leg (The first leg being the scene, of course, of THAT goal by Lionel Messi.) Aside from being perhaps the shock of the European season, the victory also qualified unfashionable Getafe for the UEFA Cup as the club they will meet in the King's Cup final - Sevilla - have already qualified for the UEFA Champions League. Good news, right?
Wrong.
"It has come too soon. We need to construct a new stadium and other infrastructures [sic] in line with our plan to keep developing the club," Getafe president Angel Torres said recently.
"Now is the time to consolidate ourselves in the Primera Liga, but if we have to play in the UEFA Cup we will. But it could be dangerous as has been seen with other clubs in previous seasons, so we will have to try and make sure this doesn't happen."
Try and make sure this doesn't happen, he said. Does he mean, in other words: Thanks, UEFA, but no thanks? Will Getafe decline the invitation to enter the competition? Or might they purposely field an understrength squad and accept early elimination. This situation bears watching, especially by UEFA, for if Getafe do enter but actively seek elimination (not unlike
Parma in the 2004/05 competition), then the competition will be devalued.