Ireland spoil Wales' World Cup chances

Having turned 28 in July, and with his fortunes tied to a country that last qualified for the World Cup in 1958.

Update: 2017-10-10 22:57 GMT
Spain's Lago Aspas (centre) in action against Israel in their Group G qualifying match at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem. Spain, who have already qualified for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, won 1-0. (Photo: AFP)

Cardiff (England): A powerless spectator as Wales’ World Cup dreams were crushed by the Republic of Ireland, as Real Madrid star Gareth Bale has arrived at a crucial tipping point in his career.

Sidelined by the latest in a succession of calf injuries, Bale could only watch forlornly from the stands at Cardiff City Stadium as Ireland’s 1-0 win gave them a World Cup play-off berth at Wales’s expense.

Having turned 28 in July, and with his fortunes tied to a country that last qualified for the World Cup in 1958, Bale has missed out on his best chance of playing at football’s biggest event.

He was the undisputed figurehead of Wales’s successful qualifying campaign for Euro 2016 and then starred with three goals as Chris Coleman’s side confounded every expectation by reaching the semifinals in France.

But his injury woes have obliged other players to step up in recent months, with 17-year-old Liverpool forward Ben Woodburn and Derby County’s Tom Lawrence among the unlikely players to have answered the Welsh call.

The loss to Ireland leaves Bale and the other members of Wales’ “Golden Generation” contemplating the demotivating thought that Euro 2016 may have been as good as it will ever get for them.

Bale can at least console himself that once he has recovered from his latest injury, his place in Coleman’s starting XI will be waiting for him, but the same cannot be said at Madrid.

With three Champions League triumphs in the past four seasons, Bale is already arguably Britain’s most successful footballing export, and yet he is under greater pressure at the Bernabeu than ever before.

Isco exploited an ankle injury sustained by Bale to move ahead of the Welshman in the pecking order last season and 21-year-old Marco Asensio’s emergence as the new darling of Spanish football has further complicated matters.

Bale managed just 19 league appearances last season as Zinedine Zidane’s men streaked to the Spanish league title and has started only four times in the league in the current campaign.

‘Isolation’ 
In a snapshot of his difficulties, he scored a sublime volley on his last outing as Madrid won 3-1 at Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League, only to then succumb to the 11th calf injury of his time in Spain. Compounding Bale’s situation is his uncomfortable relationship with Madrid’s fans.

He became a firm favourite after his world-record move from Tottenham Hotspur in 2013, his goals in the Copa del Rey and Champions League finals helping him to engrave his name in Madrid folklore. But he has since become a target of the Bernabeu boo boys, who believe he has benefited from favouritism. 

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