Sarthak Kumar narrates the story of Michu and explains his baffling decision to join amateur, fourth-division side UD Langreo
I grew up there, and it’s where I go home
–Michu, on the city of Oviedo
Michu was born and raised in the proud confines of the city of Oviedo, the capital of Asturias. A city known for being the birthplace of Fernando Alonso and Juan Mata, for the University of Oviedo - whose list of graduates include Sid Lowe - and for its unwavering dedication to art, culture, and dance.
Michu debuted in 2003 and played for Real Oviedo for four years, a club he saw move from the Tercera to the Segunda B and back again. He was the main player, the fulcrum of the team. Unfortunately, the club’s main concern was not how they were playing, but rather if they were playing. With financial problems and a relegation to the fourth tier, Michu left for second-tier Celta Vigo.
Initially with the reserves, he was called up a year later in 2008, where he stayed for three more seasons. He was, again, a mainstay but, playing as an attacking midfielder, he seemed to never score much, and didn’t register a single assist. Celta let his contract expire, and no one noticed.
Rayo Vallecano, freshly promoted to the top flight, signed him on a free in July 2011, and no one noticed.
But it was a masterstroke from José Ramón Sandoval. At Rayo, where the attacking midfielder has historically been the main goalscorer, Michu prospered. 15 goals he had scored in La Liga, one more than the 14 he had scored with Celta for four seasons.
Those goals were important too, including braces against Real Sociedad, Racing de Santander, Osasuna and Real Madrid. It was his first season in La Liga and he had been a revelation.
He then transferred to Swansea in 2012 for €2.57 million, where he played as a striker and stuned the EPL. 18 league goals, the League Cup, links to Manchester United - the success just kept on coming.
Next season, Michu found himself playing as an attacking midfielder again, because of course the new €13.9 million striker Wilfried Bony is going to play as a striker. But he adjusted his game, to suit the team. And he did well, and still scored regularly. He finally got to play for the Spanish national team in October, with an impressive 56-minute shift as a striker against Belarus. What could possibly go wrong?
Everything.
In November, he suffered a knee injury that kept him out for a month, then suffered a Sprained Ankle that kept him out for another five weeks. Whether he was given the proper time to recover or not, something wasn’t right.
He had lost that ability to wriggle out of tight spots, to make those late runs into the box. He may have been physically alright but mentally, there was fear. A fear that was affecting his game. A fear that his injury would come back to haunt him.
He was loaned out to Napoli, but was again misused in that attacking midfielder role. Without regular match time he was suffering. It turned out he would suffer much more.
Michu was diagnosed with periostitis on November 4, 2014, a medical condition caused by inflammation of the connective tissue surrounding the bone. Chronic? You bet.
Not being given the proper time to recover had come back to haunt him. He was ruled out for the rest of the season, and that’s when reality had hit him - there is more to life than football. More to life than playing for the top clubs and being famous and rich. More to life than the glamour of interviews and endorsements and advertisements. More to life than the life of a footballer.
He let time heal his wounds, he quit Swansea and joined amateur, fourth division club UD Langreo, to start anew - if not his football career then at least his career as a whole. Michu had rejected offers from top flight clubs such as Rayo Vallecano and Granada. But why?
Because Langreo is 20 kilometers away from Oviedo.
It’s where he grew up, and it’s where he goes home.
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