Atletico prepares for Madrid derby

Atletico Madrid are ready to throw off the gloves and get ugly if that is what it takes to grind out a result against bitter city rivals Real for the first time in more than a decade, according to coach Gregorio Manzano.



Claudio Ranieri was the last man in charge at the Spanish capital's second club to savour victory over Real, when former Netherlands striker Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink scored twice in a 3-1 away triumph in 1999.

Although their chances of causing an upset at the Bernabeu Saturday appear remote, with Jose Mourinho's Real flying high at the top of La Liga and on a run of 12 straight wins in all competitions, Manzano was in combative mood in an interview published in As sports daily Wednesday.

"Playing attractive, open and joyous football does not help you in the slightest if in the end you don't achieve your objective, which is to win," Manzano said.

"That's what we have to do. No joyous, open or attractive play," the 55-year-old added.

"We have to play a closed, ugly, harsh game, not devoid of quality but not being little sisters of pity either."

Known in Spain as 'the professor', Manzano has had a troubled start to his latest stint in charge at Atletico, with the club down in ninth place in La Liga and their notoriously impatient fans growing increasingly restive.

The 2010 Europa League winners offloaded Sergio Aguero and Diego Forlan in the close season and brought in players including Colombia striker Radamel Falcao, who may miss Saturday's game due to injury, midfielders Diego of Brazil and Arda Turan of Turkey and Spain Under-21 forward Adrian.

The team has sparked into life on occasion but has yet to find the consistency that could see them challenging for a qualification spot in the Champions League for next season.

ONE MACHINE

Manzano said Saturday's opponents Real were starting to gel more as a team in Mourinho's second season in charge and were relying less on swift counter-attacks.

"This season Real Madrid have improved in the way they apply pressure in their opponent's half," he said.

"To build a team you need sufficient time, to adjust the pieces so that everyone becomes part of one machine.

"What we want at Atletico is to have this time to fit all the pieces together."

The top three are all playing in Madrid Saturday, with second-placed Barcelona, who are three points behind Real, at Getafe and Valencia, four points further back in third, at Rayo Vallecano.

Barca secured top spot in Champions League Group H with a 3-2 success at AC Milan Wednesday and coach Pep Guardiola said they were relieved to have done so with a game to spare given the packed nature of the fixtures calendar in December.

Barca take on Real at the Bernabeu in the opening 'Clasico' of the season on 10 December before heading off to compete in the Club World Cup in Japan.