How the six players Barcelona signed alongside Luis Suarez fared

How the six players Barcelona signed alongside Luis Suarez fared

by Emily Smith
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The summer of 2014 was a big one at Barcelona. It was the first of Josep Maria Bartomeu’s ill-fated presidency, and the club was still reeling from being pipped to the La Liga title by Atletico Madrid.

The response was to spend over €160million in the transfer market, with almost half of that outlay on a club-record signing, Luis Suarez.

The Uruguayan had just produced one of the great individual Premier League seasons at Liverpool, but was banned by FIFA from any football-related activity for four months after biting Giorgio Chiellini at the World Cup.

Luis Enrique was newly-appointed as manager, and after a slow start, Suarez eventually came into the team and helped inspire the side to the treble. Here’s how their six other signings that summer fared.

Marc-Andre ter Stegen
Ter Stegen had made over 100 appearances for his boyhood club Borussia Monchengladbach and had a reputation as a rising star when Barcelona signed him as a 22-year-old in 2014.

He had to be patient for opportunities, with Claudio Bravo entrusted with the gloves in La Liga, but the young German was given opportunities in the cups, featuring throughout the Copa del Rey and Champions League parts of their treble in his debut season.

It wasn’t until 2016 that he fully became Barcelona’s first choice, and hasn’t looked back since, becoming one of Barcelona’s standout performers as they won league titles in 2016, 2018 and 2019.

A little like Jan Oblak at Atletico Madrid, the German goalkeeper’s form has dipped a little since the standards he set in years gone by, but you’d back him to refind that form again.

Marc-Andre ter Stegen could save anything, even a 10GB file on a 4GB USB memory key 💾pic.twitter.com/FHFkTXJYHT

— Goal (@goal) March 30, 2020

Ivan Rakitic
A decade ago, La Masia golden boy Thiago Alcantara, and returning prodigal son Cesc Fabregas, were talked up as the natural long-term heirs to Xavi Hernandez.

But by the summer of 2014, Thiago had left to reunite with Pep Guardiola at Bayern Munich, and Fabregas had left after three years back at his hometown club that hadn’t quite gone as planned, departing the Camp Nou to join forces with former arch-enemy Jose Mourinho at Chelsea.

Xavi remained at Barcelona, but Spain’s shock group-stage exit from the 2014 World Cup told you that his magic was finally fading.

The legendary midfielder stepped back to play a more backseat role during his final season at the club, and the man who stepped into his place in midfield alongside Sergio Busquets and Andres Iniesta was not a Catalan, but a Croatian, with no Cruyffist DNA.

But Rakitic offered Barcelona exactly what they needed at that time, and played a crucial, often-underappreciated role, offering more energy and selfless running to give the side some much-needed balance in a side that could so easily have been too top-heavy with Messi, Neymar and Suarez.

After six years and over 300 appearances, Rakitic returned to Sevilla with four Copa del Rey, four La Liga titles and one Champions League, having opened the scoring in the 3-1 victory over Juventus in the final.

🎁 4⃣ 🎁

ℹ️ Barcelona number 4 Ivan Rakitić broke the deadlock inside 4 minutes against Juventus in the 2015 final ⚽️#UCLadvent 🎄 pic.twitter.com/UkGm6zIeIr

— UEFA Champions League (@ChampionsLeague) December 4, 2018

Claudio Bravo
Experienced Chile international Bravo had established himself as a steady pair of hands over the course of eight years and over 200 La Liga appearances for Real Sociedad.

His big break finally arrived in the summer of 2014, arriving to give competition to fellow new recruit Ter Stegen. Bravo didn’t make a single appearance in the successful cup runs, but started 37 of 38 games as Luis Enrique’s men won La Liga in 2014-15, and 32 of 38 as they retained it the following year.

After two years and two titles, he left to join Manchester City in 2016, as Ter Stegen deservedly got the nod as Barcelona’s out-and-out No.1.

Premier League viewers may think of Bravo as error-prone, but he was a largely dependable presence between the sticks at the Camp Nou.

Jeremy Mathieu
Much maligned, in part thanks to his ungainly physical presence and oft-haphazard defending style, France international Mathieu struggled to usurp Javier Mascherano as Gerard Pique’s favoured partner in the centre of defence.

But he could be useful as a squad player on his day, and scored a couple of important goals for the club. He cost €20million to sign from Valencia and left on a free transfer to Sporting Lisbon three years later, but it was far from the worst piece of business under Bartomeu’s presidency.

Douglas
Romario, Rivaldo, Ronaldo, Ronaldinho, Neymar… Barcelona have been blessed to have some of the greatest Brazilian footballers in history represent their club.

They’ve also had the likes of Keirrison, Henrique and Fabio Rochemback, of whom endearingly bungling right-back Douglas can be filed alongside.

READ: Ranking the 26 Brazilians to sign for Barcelona since 1990

Thomas Vermaelen
The Belgium international’s stock had fallen so much during his latter years at Arsenal that their fans couldn’t quite believe their luck when Barcelona offered £15million for his services.

An injury-hit 2014-15 campaign meant he was restricted to a single, underwhelming, 63-minute appearance in a 2-2 draw with Deportivo La Coruna. Things didn’t get a great deal better from there: five years on Barcelona’s books amounted to just 53 appearances, never more than 20 in any one season.

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