Miguel Pérez Cuesta, known to the Premier League as Michu, coolly
took his tally to thirteen goals for the season this weekend and the Spaniard
is fast becoming the signing of the season.
The £2 million summer signing for Swansea City is only four
gaols shy of matching his remarkable tally from last season, hitting seventeen
goals for relegation threatened Rayo Vallecano, which made him the top scoring
Spanish midfielder in La Liga in 2012.
2011/2012 was Michu’s only experience of the top flight in
Spanish football, but his goal-scoring exploits for Swansea have banished any
fears that last year was a flash in the pan. Aged 26, his chance in the premier
divisions has come relatively late, and despite scoring seventeen last season
he only hit double figures on one other occasion, in a nine year spell in and
around Spain’s second tier.
Players who make their breakthrough late are often more
appreciative of where they have come from and Michu’s languidness and composure
around the pitch are indicative of a man who has a great understanding of the
game.
His brace against Arsenal was a lesson in finishing and
composure. The first was a beautifully shaped left foot finish, before seeming
to take too long when played in but the Asturias native was the coolest man in
the pitch as Arsenal players came back at him, only to roll it past a flailing Wojciech
Szczęsny.
If many Arsenal fans were still in the Emirates to observe
Michu’s second celebration they would have noticed the 26-year-old drop to his
knees and performing a dual rendition of his trademark ear flick. Penned to
silence Granada fans who booed Michu after missing a penalty in 2010, Michu responded
with a penalty of his own for Vallecano in 2011 and was ready with his riposte.
Michu seems to glide around the football pitch, much like
Dimitar Berbatov, never seemingly in full sprint, but incredibly efficient with
his movement and seemingly in the right position to finish of Swansea attacks.
Signed as a replacement for Gylfi Sigurdsson, Mich started
the season playing just behind Danny Graham, though over the course of the
season Swansea’s number 9 has been deployed as the forward, responding with a
remarkable return of goals.
That Michu has no caps for Spain will come as a surprise to
casual observers in England. These are likely to be the same observers who took
no interest in Miguel Pérez Cuesta when he was touted round Europe over the
summer.
Rayo Vallecano was financially destitute and needed to cash
in on their best player over the summer. Michu was rumoured to have been
offered to every club in the Premier League club for a fee of £2 million and
after a return of thirteen goals in sixteen matches, Swansea will be fending
off Champions League clubs in the January transfer window.
Managers are quick to bemoan that there is a lack of value
in the transfer market, especially on English players. The fees spent on Andy
Carroll, Adam Johnson, Jordan Henderson and company are enough to make managers
think twice before signing any player, but Michu proves that the financial
clout of the English game dominates all but the big two in Spain.
The television revenues that the English Premier League accrue
allow English sides to pay wages that are far better than La Liga sides. A side
like Stoke are financially flush compared to Serie A and La Liga and the
depressing truth for football purists, is that they could buy the best player
from a Valencia or Fiorentina.
Michu was far from a gamble, anyone with an internet
connection could tell you that there is a better than good chance that the
top-scoring midfielder in the world’s then second best league, would do well in
the Premier League.*
Interest is inevitable after his start to the season, but
Michu declared he is happy at Swansea for the foreseeable future, and being the
focal point of a Michael Laudrup side is an enjoyable role.
Michu is also a man of principle. He turned down a move to
Sporting Gijon, then in the Primera Division, because he is a boyhood Real Oviedo
fan and the two clubs are fierce rivals from Northern Spain. Swansea will
struggle to keep hold of Michu for much longer, but he is not the kind of
player to force through a move.
At £2 million the Spaniard is undoubtedly the signing of
this season and is proof that there is value in an age of financial doping in football.
(Would just like to point out I had Michu in my Fantasy
Football team from week one. I should be a manager.)
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