The unfortunate case of Andriy Lunin
This season was undoubtedly Andriy Lunin’s breakout season. Thibaut Courtois’ ACL injury early on in the season presented Lunin with an opportunity that he had not received before: a clear, consistent path to the first XI. The loan signing of Kepa seemed to ruin this opportunity, but luckily for Lunin, Carlo Ancelotti allowed the two keepers to fight for the starting spot, and Andriy Lunin was able to cement himself as the starting goalkeeper for Real Madrid.
What followed was a stunning season, a season in which Real Madrid won LaLiga (with the fewest goals conceded), won the Spanish Super cup, and have reached the UEFA Champions League final. In LaLiga, Lunin proved to be truly incredible. Conceding the least goals per game of any keeper (0.8 p90), keeping 10 clean sheets in 21 appearances, and having the 3rd best save percentage of all keepers (73.8%), Andriy Lunin proved to be worthy of the title of Real Madrid’s starting goalkeeper. The story in the Champions League was similar, with his performances in the quarter and semi-finals garnering him widespread praise from the footballing world. Playing the majority of games for Real Madrid this season, it was widely assumed that regardless of Thibaut Courtois’ status, Lunin would start the UCL final against Borussia Dortmund. However, this has not proven to be the case. After Courtois came back from his injury in early May against Cadiz, the Belgian has played 4 of the subsequent 5 games, and with Lunin picking up an unfortunate illness in the last few days, there is no doubt on who will start the final. Courtois’ performances in his 5 appearances have also not been good for Lunin’s case to start. Despite suffering a horrific ACL injury, and then reopening an old meniscus injury on his other knee, Courtois does not look any different. He has been as imperious as he was, and his performance against Alaves showed everyone that he hasn’t lost anything. 10 saves in total, and 5 against shots from inside the box, Courtois reminded everyone who the best goalkeeper in the world in the last 4 or so seasons was. Despite all his hard work and stunning performances this season, it is now more than obvious that the starting goalkeeper against Dortmund will be Courtois.
This is the nature of football, and this is the nature of football at Real Madrid. Courtois is the starting goalkeeper, and he prior to this season, Courtois was undoubtedly the best goalkeeper in the world, and he still could be, the only thing stopping him from reclaiming that title is a small sample. Courtois is Courtois. As good as Lunin has been, his season was not flawless. He made the occasional mistake, and this can be attributed to his age and lack of experience. At 25, Lunin is not a youngster, but it must be remembered that goalkeepers hit their peaks later, and as he was the back-up to Courtois, Lunin does not have the same level of experience that a 25-year-old outfielder would have. In fact, over the past 3 seasons, Lunin only made 17 appearances for Real Madrid. However, it must also not be ignored that Lunin was one of the best goalkeepers in the world this season. He did make mistakes, but there are no clear weaknesses in his game. A great shot stopper and dominant in the box (proved by how well he handled Manchester City and Bayern’s barrage of set-pieces directly aimed at him), Lunin has the fundamentals down. With the ball at his feet, and at distributing it, Lunin is already better than Courtois, and considerably so. Yet, despite all this, Courtois is going to start, and the logic behind the decision is also sound. Courtois has more experience, he has had a good run of games to get into rhythm, and the confidence he transmits to the rest of the team is also a factor that cannot be ignored. If the signs are true, and Courtois hasn’t lost a step due to his injuries, then Courtois should still be seen as the best goalkeeper in the world, and his place in the starting XI is somewhat warranted.
It is unfortunate, but it is reality. Lunin has worked tirelessly and performed incredibly, yet this work will seemingly go unrewarded. On top of this, it is also obvious that regardless of what happens on Saturday, the starting goalkeeper for next season will be Courtois. Courtois could have an amazing game, a quiet game, or make a horrible mistake and cost Madrid the final, and he will still be the starter next season. And, as said before, if he has not lost any ability, then it is unlikely that Lunin will displace him from that spot. This is the unfortunate reality that Lunin is facing, and no one would blame him for choosing to avoid it. Up for a renewal, Lunin is now at a crossroads. His performances this season would guarantee a move to a good team, and a guaranteed starting spot. However, there is no team greater than Real Madrid, and staying to fight for his spot could work out as well. Courtois is 32, and in recent years, Real Madrid has been a meritocratic team. There is no better example of this than Viní Jr. Despite performing better than the injury riddled Eden Hazard, Viní was infamously dropped by Zidane against Manchester City in the UCL a few seasons ago, and Eden Hazard failed to perform. Vinícius was also moved to right wing-back by Zidane to accommodate Hazard against Chelsea, and the result was the same once again. When Carlo Ancelotti took over the following season, it was made clear that his starting attackers were Hazard and Bale, both of whom were far past their prime and injury riddled. Yet, Vinícius persevered, and is now the team’s leading attacker. While Lunin’s situation does not have exact parallels to this, it still shows that a meritocratic path to the starting XI is there.
Regardless of what Lunin decides, his decision must be respected. The situation he is in is difficult, and the choice to leave or stay will be even harder. Whatever he decides, his contributions to Real Madrid must not be forgotten, and his role as the keeper who helped us win a league title and potentially a UCL will be cemented in history.