Had there ever been a collection of individual superstars like those assembled by Real Madrid in 2003? When David Beckham arrived from Manchester United that summer, he joined Ronaldo, Zinedine Zidane, Luis Figo, Roberto Carlos and Raul.
All six players had featured among the top two in the voting for the Ballon d'Or in the previous four years. For context, there is currently no club in the world that can claim to employ more than one player to have achieved that in the last four years.
The so-called Galacticos had been unable to defend their Champions League crown in the 2002/03 season, despite a famous Ronaldo-inspired win over Manchester United in the quarter-final. But they did win La Liga and were expected to do so again.
What would unfold was Madrid's first trophyless season since 1995/96. That ignominious campaign brought no European football for the first time in a generation amid turmoil off the pitch. This was more shocking in its own way. It was thought impossible.
And yet, club president Florentino Perez saw his plans unravel. Two thirds of the way into the season, the team were top of La Liga and expecting glory in Europe but endured a collapse that left his policy under scrutiny and the Galacticos a byword for excess.
As Madrid faltered, Valencia fired.
It was they who reclaimed the title under Rafa Benitez and won the UEFA Cup to go with it. They were a brilliant team but did not boast even a single Ballon d'Or podium-maker. For Benitez, the devil was in the detail. For Valencia, the strength was in their unity.
Xisco Munoz made his Valencia debut that season, appearing 33 times in all competitions. "Until then, I had only played for myself," he tells Sky Sports. "Maybe not myself but my own characteristics. Rafa
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