Editions
Los 40 USA
Scores
Follow us on
Hello

BARÇA-ESPANYOL

Espanyol hoping to burst Barça's title bubble

Espanyol travel to La Liga leaders Barcelona tomorrow aiming to repeat their feat of denying their bitter local rivals the title in 2007.

El Tamudazo
ENRIC FONTCUBERTADIARIO AS

Espanyol travel to La Liga leaders Barcelona on Sunday aiming to repeat their feat of denying their bitter local rivals the title in 2007.

Barca hold the slenderest of advantages in the title race with two games remaining as they lead Atletico Madrid thanks to their better head-to-head record with Real Madrid a point behind in third.

ESTADIO CAMP NOU DE BARCEONA
Full screen
ESTADIO CAMP NOU DE BARCEONAPEPE ANDRESDIARIO AS

In eerily similar circumstances Barca were embroiled in a three-way title race with Sevilla and Madrid when Espanyol travelled to the Camp Nou on the penultimate day of the season nine years ago.

Then a last minute equaliser from Raul Tamudo snatched the title from Barca's grasp and allowed Real to be crowned champions the following weekend.

Tamudo's strike has gone down in Espanyol folklore as the "Tamudazo" and has become more popular than even the goals he hit to land the club their last two trophies in the Copa del Rey finals of 2000 and 2006.

Raul Tamudo,
Full screen
Raul Tamudo,JUAN BARBOSAEL PAÍS

After a 1-0 win over Sevilla last weekend to move to the brink of mathematically sealing their survival in the top flight, Espanyol fans chanted "we want another Tamudazo" whilst the players celebrated.

"I am dreaming about that," said Espanyol striker Felipe Caicedo when asked about the possibility of repeating Tamudo's strike."We know the difficulties of playing there, but I am a striker and I live to score. "The dressing room is thinking about mathematically securing survival. If we achieve that the consequence will be taking the title from Barcelona."

However, Barcelona have recovered from their alarming dip of three consecutive league defeats last month to stay on top by scoring 16 goals without reply in their three games since.

"We don't fear a Tamudazo. With the fans behind us we expect to get the job done," said Barca defender Jordi Alba. "We never thought the league was won. It is very tight, our rivals aren't slipping up and it is in our hands."

Barca boss Luis Enrique is expected to make just one change from the side that started the 2-0 win over Real Betis last weekend with Marc-Andre ter Stegen replacing the injured Claudio Bravo in goal.

In contrast to Atletico and Real, Barca also have the advantage of having had a free midweek to prepare, whilst the sides from the capital were busy booking their places in the Champions League final.

However, only a Barca win allied to an Atletico defeat and Real dropping points will allow the Catalans to be proclaimed champions on Sunday.