“We’ve beaten one of the best teams in the world,” said captain Dani Parejo after Villarreal secured a 1-0 victory over Bayern Munich in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final last week. But he knows it might not be enough.
Unai Emery’s side will take a one-goal lead into Tuesday’s
second leg in Germany, yet the overriding feeling was regret as a series of
missed chances kept Bayern alive.
“We produced a tremendous performance and if we’re honest we
should have won by more,” said Villarreal midfielder Giovani Lo Celso.
Instead, a one-goal deficit is far from insurmountable for a
team that has scored 17 goals in their last five games at home and 20 in their
last four European matches at the Allianz Arena.
Villarreal have made a habit of neutralising glamorous
opponents, even if their La Liga position of seventh shows they can struggle
against modest opposition.
While Emery’s forensic analysis and in-depth video sessions
might stifle the spontaneity needed to beat limited sides, it means his team
are tactically astute and difficult to break down.
In the past year, Villarreal have beaten the Europa League
champions, the Coppa Italia winners, the Bundesliga champions and the FA Cup
winners. They also defeated Manchester United to win last season’s Europa
League.
In Spain, they are unbeaten this season against defending
champions Atletico Madrid and leaders Real Madrid.
After the stunning 3-0 victory in Turin that knocked out
Juventus in the last 16, Villarreal will believe they can complete the job in
Germany and reach the club’s first Champions League semi-final since 2006.
Win or lose in Munich, the win against Bayern in the home
leg will go down in the Villarreal history books.
‘Biggest challenge’
While Bayern were winning a third consecutive European Cup
in 1976, Villarreal were being relegated to the fourth tier in Spain. When
Bayern won their fifth in 2013, Villarreal had just been promoted back to the
top flight.
The population of Vila-real, at just over 50,000, could fit
inside Bayern’s stadium with 25,000 seats to spare. No smaller town has
produced a team to win a European title.
For the majority of their history Villarreal lay in the
third division until Spanish billionaire Fernando Roig took over in 1998.
Roig has improved the stadium, the training ground and the
team. Villarreal signed players such as Riquelme, Diego Forlan, Marcos Senna
and Santi Cazorla.
They have been a fixture in the top flight for all but one
of the 22 seasons this century.
With stability secured, Emery was hired to take the team to
the next level, challenge for trophies and La Liga’s top four.
They have disappointed in the league but cup success has
kept Emery’s stock high. He was tempted by the Newcastle job in November but
turned it down, the prospect of a European run too tantalising.
Similar reasoning kept local-born star defender Pau Torres
at the club he joined as a five-year-old, despite interest last summer from
Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United.
The only question now is whether the momentous win over
Bayern Munich will be remembered as the pinnacle of an incredible run, or the
basis for something more.
“Tuesday will be the biggest challenge of my career as
coach,” Emery said. “And for the club as well, for the players, for lots of
people here.”
AFP