Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETSaturday, June 20, 2026
307 outlets · 17 languages198 briefings today
SportFriday, June 19, 2026

Cucurella’s Madrid move ends Spain’s World Cup anomaly as Mourinho rebuilds

Real Madrid’s signing of Marc Cucurella hours before Spain’s opener restored a broken link, while Bernardo Silva and Ibrahima Konaté also joined José Mourinho’s revamped squad.

Spain’s World Cup began with a goalless draw against Cape Verde in Chattanooga, but the more immediate rupture was healed before kick-off. On the same Monday, Real Madrid confirmed the €55 million capture of left-back Marc Cucurella from Chelsea, ensuring that for the first time in the tournament’s history, a Madrid player would not be absent from La Roja’s squad. The 27-year-old, whose long, curly hair and “penguin” celebration have made him a divisive figure, was the only Madrid representative in Luis de la Fuente’s 26-man list after Dani Carvajal’s disappointing season and Raúl Asencio’s exclusion. Cucurella created the most dangerous chances of a sterile first half, pushing forward aggressively, but Spain could not unlock Cape Verde’s compact defence and goalkeeper Vozinha.

Viewed from the Spain camp, the transfer was a “huge step” that Cucurella said he did not expect. Chelsea’s failure to qualify for European competition next season and a direct conversation with the returning Madrid coach José Mourinho accelerated a deal completed in a day and a half. “When a team like Madrid comes calling, it’s very hard to say no,” Cucurella told reporters, adding that finalising the move before the World Cup was crucial. The former Barcelona youth product, once a target of Stamford Bridge jeers, has reversed his fortunes to become one of Europe’s most effective full-backs, valued for his intensity, pressing and transition work — attributes Mourinho prizes.

Madrid’s shopping spree did not stop there. Bernardo Silva arrived on a free transfer from Manchester City, bringing the midfield control and footballing intelligence that has been missing since Toni Kroos and Luka Modrić departed. Ibrahima Konaté, also out of contract at Liverpool, signed until 2030 to reinforce a centre-back position repeatedly stretched by injuries to Éder Militão and David Alaba. Analysts in London note that Silva’s deep-lying playmaking alongside Aurélien Tchouaméni could restore balance, while Konaté, despite a season affected by personal tragedy, offers coverage against elite strikers. In Stuttgart, the consequences are being felt acutely: the arrivals, plus a potential €100 million move for Chelsea’s Enzo Fernández, leave no room for VfB’s Angelo Stiller or Chema Andrés, whose €13.5 million buy-back clause now looks unlikely to be triggered.

De la Fuente, speaking before Sunday’s second group match against Saudi Arabia, dismissed any notion that the transfer had unsettled his squad. “If it is good news for Cucurella, it is good news for the national team,” he said, calling the defender a “constant value” he has known since the player was 17. Cucurella himself was philosophical about the opening stalemate: “It’s good that this happened in the first match, because in knockout games you go home.” Spain, the European champions, now depend on him and Nico Williams to ignite a campaign that must deliver a Euro-World Cup double.

Madrid’s rebuild may not be finished. Reports from the Spanish capital suggest Inter Milan right-back Denzel Dumfries is close, while Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise and Atlético Madrid’s Julián Álvarez have been linked, the latter more a political gesture than a genuine pursuit. With most of the squad still at the World Cup, Mourinho will not have his full group until later in the summer, but the early moves have already reshaped the European champions’ competitive profile and ended a curious statistical drought for the club at the global tournament.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressContinental European press
Arab Gulf press
TriumphUrgency

Marc Cucurella's last-minute transfer to Real Madrid rescued the club's prestige, ensuring that for the first time in history, Spain would not go to a World Cup without a Real Madrid player. The left-back became the sole 'Merengue' in La Roja, ending an anomalous situation that had threatened the club's historic presence in the national team.

Continental European press/ DACH+
SkepticismPragmatism

Real Madrid's transfer offensive under José Mourinho has brought three top signings in a week, including Marc Cucurella, reshaping the squad. The spending spree, with a potential 100-million-euro deal next, is being watched closely by VfB Stuttgart, whose midfield plans are affected as Mourinho opts not to pursue Stiller. The scale of the overhaul raises questions about whether the project will come together.

Related articles

Read more
Breaking
Eloy Room’s 15 saves earn Curacao historic first point in World Cup stalemate with Ecuador·Brazil Poll: Lula Leads Bolsonaro as Scandals Fail to Shift Race·Fritz subdues heat-stricken Zverev to set all-American Halle final·King Charles to Release Personal Tax Data for First Time as Monarch·Neuer claims all-time goalkeeping record in Germany’s 2‑1 comeback·Watermelon Rinds and Spent Savings: The Summer Holiday’s Quiet Crisis·Mexico top Group A after Romo exploits Korean error·Trump Declares Cuba Military Action Possible as Havana Pushes Market Overhaul·Eloy Room’s 15 saves earn Curacao historic first point in World Cup stalemate with Ecuador·Brazil Poll: Lula Leads Bolsonaro as Scandals Fail to Shift Race·Fritz subdues heat-stricken Zverev to set all-American Halle final·King Charles to Release Personal Tax Data for First Time as Monarch·Neuer claims all-time goalkeeping record in Germany’s 2‑1 comeback·Watermelon Rinds and Spent Savings: The Summer Holiday’s Quiet Crisis·Mexico top Group A after Romo exploits Korean error·Trump Declares Cuba Military Action Possible as Havana Pushes Market Overhaul·
Upd. 05:50 PM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Friday, June 19, 2026

Cucurella’s Madrid move ends Spain’s World Cup anomaly as Mourinho rebuilds

Real Madrid’s signing of Marc Cucurella hours before Spain’s opener restored a broken link, while Bernardo Silva and Ibrahima Konaté also joined José Mourinho’s revamped squad.

Spain’s World Cup began with a goalless draw against Cape Verde in Chattanooga, but the more immediate rupture was healed before kick-off. On the same Monday, Real Madrid confirmed the €55 million capture of left-back Marc Cucurella from Chelsea, ensuring that for the first time in the tournament’s history, a Madrid player would not be absent from La Roja’s squad. The 27-year-old, whose long, curly hair and “penguin” celebration have made him a divisive figure, was the only Madrid representative in Luis de la Fuente’s 26-man list after Dani Carvajal’s disappointing season and Raúl Asencio’s exclusion. Cucurella created the most dangerous chances of a sterile first half, pushing forward aggressively, but Spain could not unlock Cape Verde’s compact defence and goalkeeper Vozinha.

Viewed from the Spain camp, the transfer was a “huge step” that Cucurella said he did not expect. Chelsea’s failure to qualify for European competition next season and a direct conversation with the returning Madrid coach José Mourinho accelerated a deal completed in a day and a half. “When a team like Madrid comes calling, it’s very hard to say no,” Cucurella told reporters, adding that finalising the move before the World Cup was crucial. The former Barcelona youth product, once a target of Stamford Bridge jeers, has reversed his fortunes to become one of Europe’s most effective full-backs, valued for his intensity, pressing and transition work — attributes Mourinho prizes.

Madrid’s shopping spree did not stop there. Bernardo Silva arrived on a free transfer from Manchester City, bringing the midfield control and footballing intelligence that has been missing since Toni Kroos and Luka Modrić departed. Ibrahima Konaté, also out of contract at Liverpool, signed until 2030 to reinforce a centre-back position repeatedly stretched by injuries to Éder Militão and David Alaba. Analysts in London note that Silva’s deep-lying playmaking alongside Aurélien Tchouaméni could restore balance, while Konaté, despite a season affected by personal tragedy, offers coverage against elite strikers. In Stuttgart, the consequences are being felt acutely: the arrivals, plus a potential €100 million move for Chelsea’s Enzo Fernández, leave no room for VfB’s Angelo Stiller or Chema Andrés, whose €13.5 million buy-back clause now looks unlikely to be triggered.

De la Fuente, speaking before Sunday’s second group match against Saudi Arabia, dismissed any notion that the transfer had unsettled his squad. “If it is good news for Cucurella, it is good news for the national team,” he said, calling the defender a “constant value” he has known since the player was 17. Cucurella himself was philosophical about the opening stalemate: “It’s good that this happened in the first match, because in knockout games you go home.” Spain, the European champions, now depend on him and Nico Williams to ignite a campaign that must deliver a Euro-World Cup double.

Madrid’s rebuild may not be finished. Reports from the Spanish capital suggest Inter Milan right-back Denzel Dumfries is close, while Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise and Atlético Madrid’s Julián Álvarez have been linked, the latter more a political gesture than a genuine pursuit. With most of the squad still at the World Cup, Mourinho will not have his full group until later in the summer, but the early moves have already reshaped the European champions’ competitive profile and ended a curious statistical drought for the club at the global tournament.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 3 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressContinental European press
Arab Gulf press
TriumphUrgency

Marc Cucurella's last-minute transfer to Real Madrid rescued the club's prestige, ensuring that for the first time in history, Spain would not go to a World Cup without a Real Madrid player. The left-back became the sole 'Merengue' in La Roja, ending an anomalous situation that had threatened the club's historic presence in the national team.

Continental European press/ DACH+
SkepticismPragmatism

Real Madrid's transfer offensive under José Mourinho has brought three top signings in a week, including Marc Cucurella, reshaping the squad. The spending spree, with a potential 100-million-euro deal next, is being watched closely by VfB Stuttgart, whose midfield plans are affected as Mourinho opts not to pursue Stiller. The scale of the overhaul raises questions about whether the project will come together.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

Related articles

Sport

Eloy Room’s 15 saves earn Curacao historic first point in World Cup stalemate with Ecuador

5 languages · 19 outlets

Sport

Brazil's Win Over Haiti Dimmed by Raphinha's Recurring Hamstring Injury

5 languages · 17 outlets

Sport

Real Madrid issue formal denial over Michael Olise approach

7 languages · 11 outlets

Read more