Real Madrid: Bad boy Vinicius

After provoking Barcelona’s substitute players at the Spanish Super Cup Final and causing a huge controversy, Vinicius continued to become a negative protagonist in the defeat to Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey. Spain.

Vinicius: Negative main character

The Brazilian striker has always faced racist behavior in recent seasons in the land of bullfighting. But along with that, creating trouble for himself is a part of Vinicius’s career because of his constant loss of control and inability to stabilize his own psychology.

The Brazilian player refused to learn, and even made fans uncomfortable by waging war himself to dilute the quality football he had created and become a negative protagonist once again.



Vinicius devastated Barca in Riyadh and left a stunning image, but then, at the Metropolitano, the villainous version of Vinicius returned. He argued with everyone as if he wanted to confront the whole field. He argued with De Paul, provoking Atletico Madrid fans after Jan Oblak scored an own goal for the Galaxy. And the climax was mocking coach Diego Simeone by imitating his past celebrations, as well as arguing with the Argentinian strategist, leading to a yellow card.

Going from claiming to be no saint and trying to live a better life to becoming a troublemaker and provocateur in just 4 days is something very Vinicius. Each of the No. 7’s visits to the Metropolitano carries with it a burden of stress that causes all the leads to explode, and he loses concentration due to emotional overload.

Vinicius has created another ugly version beyond his talent

The Brazilian player played a gray match despite still trying his best, but what he gained was more pain than glory. He leads himself into duels that are too risky, angers his opponents, annoys teammates like Nacho or Modric and, above all, Real Madrid fans, who can get fed up at times. saw him participating in meaningless wars.

“Vinicius has to learn this, but it’s a match with many duels and sometimes you can’t keep a cool head,” Carlo Ancelotti replied when asked about the yellow card and Vinicius’ reaction. This is something Ancelotti has blamed his players for before, but this time, the Italian strategist wants to appease rather than be strict. He knows what to say to the Brazilian striker and what not to say.



Madridistas don’t seem to like this Vinicius, a player who tends to be idiosyncratic, distracted and likes to get into street fights rather than focus on creating quality football. They need a more mature player than a sassy teenager, someone who can distinguish when a battle needs to be won and when to teach the opponent a lesson.