Frenkie de Jong: Barcelona Can Win La Liga Against Real Madrid in Historic Clasico
De Jong: Barcelona Ready for Historic Clasico Title Clash

Frenkie de Jong flashed his signature smile as he sat in the interview room, dressed in Barcelona's training kit of blue with bright yellow trims. It was the assured look of a player aware that history is just one match away.

Historic Clasico for the Title

This Sunday night, Hansi Flick's Barcelona can clinch the league crown against their eternal rivals, Real Madrid, in a Clasico that means much more than bragging rights. Such an occasion has never arisen in La Liga's 97-year history. The grand episode is set to unfold at the refurbished Camp Nou, which will stage its first Clasico in more than 1,000 days. In the October Bernabeu meeting between the clubs, Madrid's victory had opened a five-point gap at the top of the table. Now Barcelona lead by 11, needing only a draw to secure the championship with only four matches to play.

"The approach is the same because we always prepare to win," De Jong said. "But of course, the feeling is different. It's El Clasico, and now it's even more special because we can win La Liga."

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Shift in Momentum

The momentum has shifted sharply since those early months of the season. Madrid enter the weekend amid turbulence with coaching uncertainty, internal clashes, and indifferent form, while Barcelona are bouncing with belief. "There are moments in a season where a team grows," De Jong said. "I think we are more reliable now than we were at the beginning. We've always had quality, but form, injuries and availability matter. Madrid has a great team, but maybe they are not in their best moment right now. We focus on ourselves."

In matches of this magnitude, the midfield may determine the outcome, and Barcelona's lack of a defensive fulcrum in the nature of Sergio Busquets is a recurring point of discussion, especially with exits in the semi-finals and quarter-finals of the Champions League in consecutive seasons despite showing promise. De Jong dismissed the notion that Barcelona lack balance in the centre. "We have a great midfield," he said. "Injuries always affect a team, but one of our strengths is depth and versatility in that area."

However, he acknowledged the lingering frustration in Europe. "The Champions League was disappointing because we thought we could go further," he said. "But overall, we've had a good season. We've scored many goals, we have a lot of points in Liga, and winning the league requires consistency more than anything. Because of Europe, maybe the season hasn't been great, but it has been good."

De Jong's Role and Youngsters

At only 28, De Jong has quietly become Barcelona's longest-serving first-team player with 318 matches and the Dutchman with the most appearances in club history, extending a lineage deeply tied to the Netherlands and influential figures like Johan Cruyff. His own career has been interrupted at times by injury. Now he finds himself guiding a younger generation, particularly Lamine Yamal, whose rapid ascent has brought both acclaim and scrutiny off the field. A hamstrung Yamal will miss Sunday's match, and this season has been undermined by concerns over his ongoing 'pubalgia' condition despite his starry performances.

"I think he should continue exactly as he is," De Jong said. "He should enjoy football the way he always has. If he keeps doing that, I believe he will have a great career, and that will also be beneficial for us."

Mbappe and Teamwork

Across the divide stands Kylian Mbappe, whose second season in Madrid has prompted waves of criticism from Los Blancos fans despite his high turnover of 41 goals from 41 matches. De Jong was measured in his assessment. "Mbappe is one of the best players in the world," he said. "When he plays, Madrid are stronger. But football can be very reactionary. One result or action changes everything in people's minds."

For the silent orchestrator, though, the game's larger truth remains unchanged. "It's not really about individuals," he said. "Both teams have great players. What decides matches now is teamwork and hard work."

And if Barcelona complete the task against Real? "It's not over yet," De Jong said, smiling again. "But I hope Sunday will become my favourite moment of the season."

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