RCD Mallorca Relegated: A Season of Heartbreak

Heartbreak for RCD Mallorca last night as they were relegated from La Liga to Segunda División. Mallorca did their job, beating an already relegated Real Oviedo 3-0, but results elsewhere meant they went down based on their head-to-head record against other teams. When exactly two teams are tied, the league separates them using the matches played only against each other.

The league table doesn’t lie and, in truth, Mallorca went down for a few reasons. In the first half of the season, they just weren’t good enough, and they took too long to replace coach Jagoba Arrasate. They finished seventh in the league based on their home form; where they struggled was away from home, finishing 19th in the away table and winning only two games on the road. The new coach, Martín Demichelis, got the team playing again, but they lost two of their last three games, and that was enough to send them down.

Mallorca finished on 42 points, and in most seasons that would be enough to stay up, but it was so tight that Getafe CF, who qualified for Europe in seventh place, finished just nine points ahead.

One of the positives to come out of the season was Vedat Muriqi, who scored 23 goals and finished second in the “Pichichi”, Spain’s Golden Boot award, behind Kylian Mbappé of Real Madrid CF. The question now is whether they can hang on to him.

After five straight seasons in La Liga, Mallorca must now rebuild and look for promotion back to the top division. I hope they can keep the majority of the squad together.

Players out of contract are Takuma Asano, Omar Mascarell, Javier Llabrés and Iván Cuéllar. Players on loan are Marash Kumbulla, Luvumbo and Mateu Joseph. Conversely, players currently out on loan who will return are Leo Román Domenech, Cyle Larin and David Luna.

The lack of TV money will undoubtedly lead to players leaving. In La Liga, top teams like Real Madrid CF and FC Barcelona pull in €155 million to €160 million per season. Mid-table or lower teams generally secure around €40 million to €50 million.

In Segunda División, most sides earn roughly €6 million to €8 million. The only clubs that cross the €15 million to €22 million mark are recently relegated teams, who receive heavily subsidised payouts from a shared compensation fund (parachute payments) to ease their transition.

Criticism has been levelled at the club and its directors over the direction the club has taken. You could say there has been too much focus on the non-footballing side and not enough on the core business. The stadium is of a very high standard, with lots of corporate opportunities, conference facilities, a sports clinic and a sports café, but when your team on the field doesn’t match your facilities off it, there is a problem.

Is there a Premier League team this scenario reminds you of?

We now have a La Liga stadium with a team playing in Segunda División.

I can’t stress enough how important it is for Mallorca to return to La Liga next season. It’s great for tourism, as people do visit the island to watch football. It’s great for those of us who live here to see teams such as FC Barcelona and Real Madrid CF play live. Finally, it’s great for youth football on the island. Having a team playing in La Liga is aspirational for all of our young footballers.

The one positive I can draw from this sorrowful tale is that season tickets will be cheaper next season.

Visca Mallorca!

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