Late-afternoon on Monday, Ernesto Valverde is still Barcelona’s manager with the world waiting for an end to this public pantomimeBarcelona’s ex-manager took training on Monday morning, if only because he wasn’t the ex-manager just yet. Besides, someone somewhere had to act with a little dignity. And what if it didn’t happen? He certainly wasn’t about to make the decision for them, so Ernesto Valverde drove into San Joan Despí not long after 8am. At 11, he was out on the training pitch as normal, players gathered in a circle around him, which was one way to say: “goodbye … probably.” By the time he drove out again, he knew, it was likely to be for the last time. But not because they had actually told him.
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On Thursday night, Valverde’s team had collapsed again. While they played better than they had so far this season, he got booed every time he appeared on the big screen. 2-1 up with nine minutes remaining against Atlético Madrid in the Spanish Super Cup in Jeddah,
Barcelona lost 3-2: echoes of Rome and Anfield, that recurring nightmare. Three times was too many. Two already had been, but to almost everyone’s surprise, the club didn’t act in the summer, instead keeping their coach. They did act now, just not particularly well. “A bit ugly,” was Andrés Iniesta’s verdict; “unpleasant,” he called it.