Before the Blaugrana spend big on a centre-back in the summer transfer window, they need to determine if Bartra has the potential to be a world-class player.
A decade after Migueli hung up his boots, Puyol took up the mantle of pushing past the pain barrier, playing every game as if it was the UEFA Champions League final and showing the passion needed to be a Barcelona legend.
The same trait we praise him for—playing through injury—is the primary reason why Carles has found himself in this precarious situation.
His mind may still react like the old Puyol, but his feet don't, so he's always a liability when an opposing player takes him on.
Marca reported: "Carles Puyol could be the surprise inclusion in the Barcelona squad for the Champions League semi-finals first leg at Bayern Munich." Surprise is the wrong word to use.
2. Having to be the shoulder to lean on as she vents about her ex-boyfriend demanding over $250 million in damages—he claims he masterminded her success (via Dareh Gregorian at the New York Daily News).
He went from being one of the greatest defensive midfielders of his generation to a mediocre centre-back prone to being outsmarted by opposing forwards.
The only difference between he, Alex Song, Sergio Busquets and Adriano is that the Argentine has had an extended run at the back.
Instead of starting Adriano, who is clueless when it comes to positional awareness, Marc Bartra should have been given the nod in the UEFA Champions League second leg vs. Paris Saint-Germain.
It would have allowed management, the fans and his teammates to see what he was made of, especially when PSG were in the ascendancy.
When Marc did come on, he blocked a shot and made the most clearances in the game (not always a good thing if you kick it straight back to the opposing team).
Bartra was excellent in the 2-1 win over Celtic last October, when he won back the ball eight times whilst completing 93 percent of his passes.
You can't use the excuse of him not starting for a few months to cover his awful game when management put him in a situation to succeed.
Celta's offence runs through one man—Iago Aspas—who went el loco on Carlos Marchena the game before and was subsequently suspended.
Solid outings against Real Zaragoza and Mallorca gives you enough confidence to say that Bartra isn't the next Andreu Fontàs.
1. If Bartra looks amateurish, club president Sandro Rosell will stop procrastinating and finally buy a centre-back of top quality in the summer transfer window.
2. Should Bartra be a major factor in Barça dumping out Bayern, then Cules can retort to all the Varane hype: "We have Marc Bartra."
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