Joaquin's swan song: Betis face Valencia in Copa del Rey final

Betis' Joaquin Sanchez, left, up against Real Madrid's Mateo Kovacic during their La Liga soccer match at the Benito Villamarin stadium, in Seville, Spain, on Oct. 15, 2016. (AP)
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Updated 22 April 2022
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Joaquin's swan song: Betis face Valencia in Copa del Rey final

  • Until last season, Joaquin still played significant minutes and scored goals
  • This season, with stiff competition led by midfielders Sergio Canales and Nabil Fekir, his playing time has dropped

The last time Real Betis won a major title, Joaquín Sánchez was there to help it lift the Copa del Rey.

Seventeen years later, the charismatic forward has the chance to put the perfect finish to his long career when his Betis plays Valencia in the final of Spain’s cup competition on Saturday.

The 40-year-old Joaquín has said that this, his 22nd season, will be his last. But before he hangs up his boots, he has the chance to not only celebrate a title, but help his club end its long wait for another trophy.

Joaquin is finishing his second successful stint with his boyhood club. The highlight of his first years with Betis was the 2005 Copa del Rey final, where it beat Osasuna 2-1 for its second cup to go with a sole Spanish league title from 1935.

Joaquin later joined Valencia, his rival in Sunday’s final, and helped it also to win the Copa del Rey in 2008. After stints with Malaga and Italian club Fiorentina, he was greeted by 20,000 fans on his return to Betis in 2015. He also became an investor in the club and became Betis' record-holder for most appearances.

Until last season, Joaquin still played significant minutes and scored goals. This season, with stiff competition led by midfielders Sergio Canales and Nabil Fekir, his playing time has dropped.

But coach Manuel Pellegrini still turned to the veteran in the final minutes of the semifinal last month against Rayo Vallecano, sending Joaquín on with the series about to enter extra time. A stoppage-time goal by Borja Iglesias sent Betis through to the final.

“This is so beautiful, my god. We are going to enjoy this,” Joaquín said after eliminating Rayo. He added one of those jokes about enjoying the good life that his fans love: “I won a Copa with Betis and another one with Valencia (...) I am all about the cups ... in a cocktail glass.”

Betis will have to only cross the city to play the final at Seville’s Estadio La Cartuja, a publicly owned stadium not to be confused with the venue of Betis' fierce rival, Sevilla.

Valencia have won the Copa del Rey eight times. They beat Betis in the 2019 semifinals en route to winning No. 8.

The final should offer a contrast of styles, pitting Pellegrini's flowing, possession-based attack against the defense-and-counterattack of Valencia coach José Bordalás.

Bordalás is counting on having winger Goncalo Guedes and center back Gabriel Paulista back from injury concerns. Guedes leads Valencia with 13 goals across all competitions, followed by midfielder Carlos Soler's 12.

While fifth-placed Betis are eyeing the Europa League or even a coveted Champions League spot, Valencia enter the weekend in 10th place in the league and with scant hopes of playing in Europe next season unless it can win the cup and earn the resulting Europa League berth.

“Being realistic, the league has gotten away from us. We have to focus all our efforts on the (cup) final,” Soler said. “Hopefully we can get the victory and a ninth Copa del Rey. This squad wants to make history.”


‘Very different times’: Harry Redknapp on the evolution of football and growing opportunities around the globe

Updated 50 min 6 sec ago
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‘Very different times’: Harry Redknapp on the evolution of football and growing opportunities around the globe

  • Former West Ham and Tottenham Hotspur manager spoke to Arab News about the field of sport science and football in the region
  • Harry Redknapp: ‘Look at Iceland beating England back in the day, Saudi beating Argentina at the last World Cup — incredible’

DUBAI: With the sun having set on a football career stretching from the Hackney Marshes to the hallowed grounds of the UEFA Champions League, former manager Harry Redknapp recently swapped a dark winter day in southern England for a balmy evening in the UAE to chat with Arab News about sport science and football in Saudi Arabia and the region.

The 78-year-old Englishman, who counts managerial spells at West Ham, Tottenham and Portsmouth on his resume, was guest of honor at the launch of the London Sport Institute in Dubai, a new hub for sport science education and research. Held inside the Burj Khalifa, the glittering launch saw Redknapp surrounded by towering professors, elite athletes, and students invested in biomechanic labs and performance analytics.

Yet the retired manager’s connection to this world — of data points and bespoke conditioning — comes through contrast rather than technical exposition. He speaks of football’s evolution not with spreadsheets and data, but rather sepia-tinged memories and yarns that make you smile.

With Premier League teams seemingly experiencing more key injuries than ever in recent years, it was put to him whether the players were being overworked. For example, Rodri, the Manchester City midfielder, was vocal in his criticism of the incessant demands on players as he amassed more than 6,000 minutes across 66 matches during the 2023-24 season. Soon after, he suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury that sidelined him for eight months.

Redknapp, typically, however, is having none of it.

“I was looking at something the other day from when Arsenal won the title back in the day,” he says, settling into his chair. “Frank McLintock, the captain, played 78 games that year — and remember that was ankle-deep, muddy pitches and no substitutes, so you had to finish the game even if you got an injury. I played with a goalkeeper at West Ham who broke his arm in the first half against Arsenal — we tied it around his neck, and he came out and played the second half on the wing. Very, very different times.”

It is an anecdote that underlines how things used to be, long before concussion protocols, GPS tracking and recovery specialists became staples of elite squads. The era of Redknapp, who played from 1965-1982 and passed through, among others, West Ham, Bournemouth, Brentford and the Seattle Sounders, was one where the demands of the sport were borne almost entirely by instinct and grit.

Football’s present and future are now dominated by the invisible hand of performance science, recording and calculating the measurement of every sprint, muscle contraction and metabolic load. LSID, part of Middlesex University Dubai’s growing footprint in sport science, embodies this shift.

Students at the institute will have access to specialist facilities where lessons move away from theory and enable practice. They will learn to interpret data from performance labs, work alongside elite teams and contribute to research that informs real‑world coaching. A far cry even from Redknapp’s own managerial days, which only ended in 2017. Former midfielder Joe Cole recently recalled a match when a physio warned Redknapp a player had banged his head and was disoriented. The manager replied they should “tell him he’s Pele and get him back out there.”

LSID’s curriculum — from strength and conditioning to sport performance analysis — reflects the growing trend of evidence‑based practices becoming central to athlete development. Far from rehabilitation, it offers proactive performance optimization, preventing injury through programs that harness technology that would have been unimaginable in Redknapp’s day. Yet the question remains: With all the data, why are injuries at the elite level increasing rather than decreasing?

“I really don’t know,” says Redknapp, who laughs when he compares today’s pitches — immaculate surfaces, meticulously maintained — with the fields of yesteryear. “It’s certainly not the training pitches because they’re amazing, too. We used to train by just running for miles. We’d run and run and run, but we didn’t seem to get injuries. I know they’re running quicker now, but it’s certainly not as physical. When you look at the old games, the tackling was unbelievable; now it’s almost become a non-contact sport, so I really don’t know why there’s so many injuries.”

For the game’s best players, the busy calendar shows no signs of slowing down. The FIFA World Cup 2026 starts just 18 days after the last day of the Premier League season. For Redknapp — who coached Jordan for a short period in 2016 — any talk of international football inevitably brings the conversation around to Arab teams and how they may fare this summer.

The global game no longer obeys its old hierarchies, he says. This summer’s showcase will feature at least five Arab teams, with Iraq hoping to join the party after an inter-confederation playoff with either Bolivia or Suriname in Mexico next month. Results have already shown the shift, he adds.

“The world has changed, hasn’t it? Anybody can turn over anybody else these days,” he said, before reeling off some recent examples. “Look at Iceland beating England back in the day, Saudi beating Argentina at the last World Cup — incredible. It’s crackers really. Saudi won and we all thought, ‘Argentina can’t win this tournament; that’s them finished.’ Yet they win the whole thing. It was amazing.”

Once tipped to become England manager, Redknapp’s point is that football’s competitive balance has tilted toward opportunity. It was certainly an opportunity that took him to Amman a decade ago, when The Chivalrous Ones were second in their World Cup qualifying group with two games remaining. He took charge of the two qualifiers, against Bangladesh and Australia, winning the first 8-0 and losing the second 5-1. Jordan narrowly missed out on Russia 2018, but they will make history by debuting this summer.

When asked whether his old side can compete rather than merely participate, he is pragmatic. “Why not? Certainly in this part of the world now, football is up and coming. It’s improving constantly and the Arab teams will only get stronger. It’s not going to be easy, obviously, but certainly Jordan have got some decent players. Prince Ali (bin al-Hussein, president of the Jordan FA) and I became good friends when I was over there. He’s a lovely, lovely man, so it’s great to see them qualify.”

That regional rise is not confined to national teams. Saudi Arabia’s domestic league has become one of football’s major talking points, largely because of its financial muscle. Redknapp does not attempt to dress that up. “The money, you know, people move,” he said. “I don’t care where you are — people move. How many players do you see in England kissing the badge? They’re there because they’re getting paid a right few quid, yet they make out they always wanted to play for that team.”

It is not framed as criticism, so much as realism from a manager who has spent decades negotiating transfers and contracts. For players weighing the move, he in fact sees a clear calculation. “It’s a great opportunity for anyone to come here and do well. I’m sure it’s a great lifestyle, but at the end of the day, the main reason is the rewards are fantastic. That’s always going to be it.”

Blunt, yes, but in Redknapp’s mind it is simply another reflection of how modern football works, whether in London, Riyadh or anywhere in between.