Sports
Martin Odegaard’s Real Madrid move revisited 10 years on – and why it didn’t work out
Mop-haired and dressed in jeans and a black-and-white striped sweater, 16-year-old Martin Odegaard looked like a student walking the streets of Madrid.
But this was no ordinary teenager.
Ten years ago today, Odegaard was in the Spanish capital to be presented as Real Madrid’s new £3.5million ($4.3m at the current exchange rate) signing, the club having beaten a host of European football’s other big beasts to buy one of world football’s brightest prospects from Stromsgodset in his homeland of Norway.
Flanked by Madrid’s communications director, he sat in silence for more than a minute as a cacophony of camera shutters clicked in front of him. Not entirely sure where to look, what to do with his hands or whether to wear the headphones he had been given for translation, a 15-minute press conference with the world’s media soon commenced.
He had not long been told about the event he was to attend. Once off the plane, there was no stop at a hotel for a briefing and no club tracksuit offered before he was taken to the Bernabeu, Madrid’s home stadium, and placed in a chair with a microphone in front of him.
Odegaard’s upbringing and temperament meant he was not overawed but it seems unthinkable today that more care would not be taken in preparing so young a player for such an experience.
Perhaps it was thought that ‘civilian’ clothes and scruffy hair would present him as a teenager with boyish potential, whereas a glossy makeover would risk hurriedly packaging the kid as Madrid’s next galactico-in-waiting.
Martin Odegaard prepares to speak to the media after signing for Real Madrid (Denis Doyle/Getty Images)
It was to be that very dilemma, of how to pace his ascent to stardom, which paralysed his six years as a Madrid player.
But how did such a talented player, who has proven he can excel at the elite level over the past three years as Arsenal captain, not do it at the club who invested so much into signing him to begin with?
Odegaard’s name had started to reverberate around European scouting circles in 2012, when he was just 13 years old but already training with Stromgodset’s first team. The secret was out and so the competition began with the red carpet rolled out by virtually every major club. His father said they received more than 30 official offers come the end of their tour.
“There was a meeting in my living room, with me, the Norway national team coach, Martin and his dad,” says Jan Aage Fjortoft, Norway’s team manager from 2014.
“We were discussing his options, which was like choosing between The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Elvis Presley. I still have two lists: the four I thought he should choose between and the four I guessed he was thinking about.”
Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, Arsenal and Liverpool made the final shortlist.
Odegaard was a player rubber-stamped by Madrid’s renowned chief scout Juni Calafat and the club’s offer included the guarantee he would train with the first team. They were also the only one of the four contenders to have a B team, which was coached at that time by legendary former player Zinedine Zidane, who had made a point of introducing himself.
Odegaard chose Madrid and immediately entered into an unusual hybrid schedule. He trained with Carlo Ancelotti’s first team during the week, alongside Marcos Llorente and Borja Mayoral — two of the club’s other highly-rated young talents. It was only on the final session of the week that Odegaard would drop down to the Castilla (reserve) team, who compete in the third tier of Spanish football.
He did not get off to the best of starts.
“He made his debut against Amorebieta and played 45 minutes on a pitch that was all mud; the water was up to our ankles,” says former Castilla team-mate Jorge Franco Alviz, known as Burgui. “Zidane had to change (substitute) him at half-time and in the locker room Odegaard kept saying, ‘Disaster, disaster’. He touched the ball twice, I think.”
Odegaard started regularly for Zidane’s B team but only registered one goal and one assist in 11 appearances. The media attention and wonderkid tag did not always sit well with other players in the Castilla team who were watching those matches from the bench despite working hard in training all week.
The two heads of youth at Madrid, Paco de Gracia and Ramon Martinez, asked Burgui to help Odegaard adapt because the newcomer was so shy. He improved over time but tended to avoid large groups and preferred to socialise with just one or two team-mates instead.
Odegaard’s father Hans, now manager of Norwegian club Lillestrom, moved to Spain with his son and was given a job coaching Madrid’s under-11 team. Football Leaks later said Odegaard Sr’s contract was allegedly worth £2.7million, roughly 10 times what would normally be expected for that kind of job.
“His father was always with him. You would see him in the corridors, so he never really left him to be alone,” says Burgui.
“I tried to help him by putting him next to me at the locker in the dressing room, because I am very open. We trained together in the gym in the afternoons. Each Tuesday and Wednesday, we were together and that brought us closer. He was 16 and I was 21 but he was at Castilla level as he was so skilful. He had a spectacular last pass, as well as his ball striking. I had no doubt that he would get to where he is now.”
Top young talents still need an avenue to experience competitive games if they are not deemed ready for a club’s first team. Come the end of that first season, Ancelotti was still showing little interest in using Odegaard — he did not name him in a single squad until the league finale.
“I thought, ‘I don’t care if he comes or not, because he’s not going to play for me now’,” recalls Ancelotti in a chapter from his 2016 autobiography Quiet Leadership, about how he focuses on managing rather than the power dynamics at clubs.
Odegaard and Ancelotti at Madrid training in 2015 (Angel Martinez/Real Madrid via Getty Images)
“He could go on to be the best player in the world after I’m gone, but I’m not interested in the signing because it isn’t of importance to my job,” he continued.
“Of course, when he came, I treated him with the same respect I would give to any young player, but why would I want to be involved in his recruitment? He is being recruited for the future, for other managers after my time.”
Odegaard did become part of Ancelotti’s tenure, however, when he was introduced 58 minutes into a 7-3 home win over Getafe that late May afternoon, replacing reigning Ballon d’Or winner Cristiano Ronaldo.
It was a strange game to come into. There was a wild scoreline in Madrid’s last game of the season but a flat atmosphere due to it being a trophyless campaign for the club. He may have masterminded Madrid’s long-awaited 10th Champions League triumph a year earlier, but Ancelotti knew this failure meant these were likely his final minutes in charge.
Despite that, he acquiesced to the pressure applied by club president Florentino Perez to give Odegaard his debut.
“It is still vital to respect the vision of the owners,” said Ancelotti. “Perez was well known for his galacticos approach, where the biggest and most expensive superstars in world football are recruited, so players would arrive and depart who would not necessarily have been my choice, but it was my job to make the team work with whatever assets I was given.
“It is a waste of time and energy to fight against something that has already happened — you must manage it. After all, that is why we are called managers. If the president decides that, for a PR exercise, he needs the Norwegian boy to play three games with the first team, I will work out a way of doing that.”
Rafael Benitez took over that summer but was sacked midway through the following season and replaced with Zidane, who knew Odegaard’s game from his time coaching him in the Castilla team. Yet Odegaard did not play a single minute in 2015-16, and made it into only one matchday squad.
The midfield options at Madrid still included Casemiro, Toni Kroos, Mateo Kovacic, Luka Modric, Isco, James Rodriguez and Llorente, which meant Odegaard and Llorente had to get regular game time from somewhere.
“There was no directive (to play them),” says Luis Miguel Ramis, who moved up from coaching the under-19 squad to take over as Castilla head coach in January 2016. “They were very good kids, so it was normal for them to play. I only remember once, in a game in Castilla La Mancha, on a very bad pitch, that I took him (Odegaard) off at half-time. The boy was lost.
“What happened is that, because he was so young, he wasn’t yet able to keep up with the competitive pace of the first team or go at the same speed. With us, the league we were in meant a lot of defensive work. He was a boy who was used to looking forwards and when he came to us, we had to work to get him to start looking backwards, and it was a bit more difficult for him.”
While Odegaard was playing in the Spanish third division, he was also regularly starting for Norway’s national team. Norway were benefiting from a long-term investment in his talent, made at a very early age, as they sought to promote him and build a side around him.
“We were discussing whether we could nominate (pick) a 15-year-old, going back and forward,” says Fjortoft. “I said, ‘Is he among the best 18 players in Norway?’, and we all agreed. One of the reasons we took him in was that we felt it was a great idea for him and his family to use the expertise and knowledge in and around the national team.
“For him to come to the national team was a great way to escape everything. The coach, Per-Mathias Hogmo, was very supportive and saw that he had to build him, to understand what a valuable asset he will be for the future of Norwegian football. He was brilliant, as a lot of coaches don’t always speak with the players a lot as they have others who will do it but he was close to Martin.
“I remember the first game Martin played. He came on, and the players just started giving him the ball. There was an acceptance of him demanding the ball and demanding the next one even if he had lost it. The best players have that.”
In Madrid, Odegaard was viewed as a little introverted but a very good team-mate and a professional in terms of training. However, there was a sense he was caught between two camps and his development stalled.
“He trained very little with us, he was always with the first team,” says Castilla team-mate Burgui. “He told me he would like to train with us for two or three days, because there were times when the first team was resting or the workload was very low because they had played Champions League the previous night. Because of the language and not being in daily dynamics with us, when he came, he didn’t understand the exercises at all.”
Odegaard played 23 games in the Norwegian top division after making his debut aged 15 years and 118 days. He became his country’s youngest international four months later and had won nine caps by March 2016, when he was still only 17.
Although many on the outside world expected Odegaard to be part of the Madrid first team, there was a feeling shared internally by some staff that even the Castilla side was too quick a step to make.
“You could see he was different on a technical level, but he struggled with the language and the tactical patterns,” says a senior Madrid academy source, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships.
“With Jose Gil (assistant to Ramis), he didn’t connect very well. Jose used to give him a lot of stick. The kid didn’t cause any problems but they even asked for him to go to the Juvenil A (youth) team.
“I would have put him in Juvenil A and stimulated him with appearances with Castilla, little by little. He would have had more security and time. He was not like Rodrygo or Vinicius Junior years later, who arrived ready-made. He was very anarchic (in his play), but when he was training with the ball, he was a crazy thing. He had arrived from a culture based on the technical, and that weighed him down.”
With no first-team pathway emerging at Madrid, Odegaard joined Dutch side Heerenveen on loan in January 2017. He spent 18 months there and a further year on loan in the same country at Vitesse Arnhem, playing 82 times as he posted expected assist (xA) numbers which made him by far the most creative under-21 talent in any of Europe’s major leagues.
The lack of goals and assists, combined with the lower level of competition, skewed the success of his time in the Netherlands. Odegaard was out of sight and out of mind — a player who had become less relevant because he was not doing it at the very top level, as had been expected.
When he returned to Madrid in summer 2019, he was still not deemed ready to break through at senior level. Instead, he joined Real Sociedad on a season-long loan and established himself as La Liga-ready, helping the Basque club to a sixth-place finish and to win the Copa del Rey, starting and scoring the first goal in a 4-3 victory over his parent club in the Bernabeu in the quarter-finals.
Having settled at a team who were playing European football, the prospect of extending his stay in San Sebastian seemed like a sensible one. It looked like it might happen, too, until Madrid tempted Odegaard back aboard the mothership with the promise of the first-team role with them he had been seeking for five years.
“All I can say is that he was very happy here,” says a Real Sociedad source, speaking anonymously to protect relationships. “Only a call from Zidane telling him that he was counting on him and that he would be important at Madrid led him not to continue for a second year. Martin wanted to stay.”
Zidane’s style of football was less structured and gave way to more back-and-forth games rather than being a possession-dominant side every week. Isco and Marcelo were two victims of that, and there was a belief that it did not suit Odegaard either.
True to his word, Zidane started Odegaard in the first two league games of the season but he was taken off at half-time away to Real Betis in the second one with his team trailing, 2-1. Isco replaced him and Madrid turned it around to win, 3-2. Odegaard dropped out of the team and two muscle injuries meant he started just one more league game and two more Champions League matches.
By that December, Odegaard was 22 years old and had played just 489 minutes for Madrid in almost six years.
The loan to Arsenal for the rest of that season had the potential to be an unsettling experience, another new country with a different style of football and no knowledge of whether it would just be a stopover for six months.
Four years on, Odegaard has made 174 appearances for the north London club. It took him time to find his top level but in Mikel Arteta he found a manager who believed in him and has designed Arsenal’s right flank to maximise his strengths in small spaces.
Martin Odegaard has become a leader under Mikel Arteta at Arsenal (Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)
Odegaard has no regrets over his decision to join Madrid as he saw it as the best education in world football at the time. There were moments during the journey when he did not know whether he was coming or going but that series of loans made him stronger.
Entering so many different changing rooms with the weight of his name hanging over him is not easy but it has built leadership qualities in him and Arteta saw fit to give him the captain’s armband ahead of the 2022-23 season, having made the transfer permanent for an initial £30million the previous summer.
“People talk about players as if they are machines, but he is like any 16-year-old leaving home to go to college for the first time,” said Fjortoft. “When I was 16, I didn’t want to go to my grandparents’ house 30km (18 miles) away because I missed home. It is all down to the mind, the toughness.
“There were people who thought he could just walk into the Madrid team and be the best player, but thankfully he has always had a good team around him. There are not many wonderkids who turned their talent into the career he has got. A few. like Wayne Rooney (after he joined Manchester United aged 18), go: trophy, trophy, trophy. But Martin had to go down and then back up, which is amazing.
“Don’t underestimate him by the way he looks. He is one of the most consequence-thinking people I have met. He looks like a guy the Vikings would have said no to, as he is not tall or brutal enough, but I would take him on any ship.”
Arteta has chosen Odegaard to steer Arsenal and now the only — albeit most difficult — task they have left is to make the transition from challengers into winners.
Additional reporting: Mario Cortegana, Guillermo Rai and Dermot Corrigan
(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)
Sports
Israeli national gymnastics team suspends all activities after Iranian counter-attack
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Israel’s national gymnastics team has suspended all training and team activities amid the recent Iranian counter-attack on the country following the U.S.-assisted strikes on Iran.
The Israel Gymnastics Federation (IGF) provided a statement to Fox News Digital announcing the violence has caused “unavoidable disruptions.”
“The current security situation in our region has resulted in unavoidable disruptions to our regular training schedule and has created significant uncertainty regarding the national teams’ professional plans, particularly as we are at the outset of the international season,” the statement read.
“At this time, all training activities have been temporarily suspended, pending approval from the relevant authorities to safely resume operations. Naturally, the suspension of training and the closure of airspace are causing considerable stress and concern. However, the safety and well-being of our gymnasts and professional staff remain our highest priority. We sincerely hope for safer and calmer days ahead, when we can focus solely on sport.”
A source within the team told Fox News Digital on Saturday that the gymnasts have been moving between bomb shelters since Iran’s counterstrikes began.
Israel’s gymnastics team is considered one of nation’s strongest Olympic programs alongside its Judo and sailing teams. The team is only a week removed from a successful trip at the Artistic Gymnastics World Cup in Germany, where the country’s star Artem Dolgopyat won the gold medal in floor gymnastics.
Now, the team will have to seek safety until the attacks are over.
The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem has directed all U.S. government employees and their family members to continue to shelter in place either in or near their residences as Iran continues to fire missiles at Israel.
Additionally, the embassy announced that due to the security situation, it would be closed on March 2, and did not give an estimate on when it would be reopening. The closure includes consular sections in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
The embassy also said it is “not in a position at this time to evacuate or directly assist Americans in departing Israel.” It noted that Ben Gurion Airport remains closed and there there are neither commercial nor charter flights operating from the airport.
On Friday, ahead of the launch of Operation Epic Fury, the embassy gave all non-essential workers permission to leave Israel, with reports that U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee urged those looking to leave to do so as soon as possible.
Iranian airstrikes killed at least eight Israelis on Sunday as Tehran’s latest missile barrage landed just miles from Jerusalem.
The strikes landed in the Israeli city of Beit Shemesh. Initial reports said four people were killed when missiles landed in a residential area on Sunday, but that death toll rose to eight, according to Israel’s national emergency service.
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Iran’s military has carried out counterattacks against Israel and U.S. bases in the Middle East after a joint U.S.-Israeli strike killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday.
The strikes also killed several other top Iranian leaders, including the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
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Sports
Prep talk: Football student-athletes to be honored at annual banquets
Local chapters of National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame have begun honoring the top senior football student-athletes, with the Coastal Canyon area banquet set for Sunday in Agoura.
Players are selected based on their grade-point averages and leadership skills, among other attributes, honoring the best of the best.
Such players as James Moffat from Crespi, Mateo Bilaver from Chaminade, Jacob Paisano of Hart, Diego and James Montes from Granada Hills Kennedy will represent their schools on Sunday.
The Los Angeles chapter will hold its gathering in Manhattan Beach on Friday.
Simi Valley coach Jim Benkert has taken over running the Coastal Canyon group with dozens of individual student-athletes set to be honored.
This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.
Sports
US Olympic hockey hero Jack Hughes opens up about support for women’s team amid backlash over Trump’s joke
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Team USA Olympic hockey hero Jack Hughes spoke about his support for his country’s women’s hockey team after his team was the subject of backlash for laughing at a joke by President Donald Trump about the women’s team.
During an interview on ESPN’s “The Pat McAfee Show” Friday, Hughes opened up about his respect for the women’s team after McAfee appeared to reference the controversy by joking that Hughes and his teammates “hate” the women players.
“We are hanging out with them so much, the women’s team. We were supporting them. Like, we were at their games, they were at our games,” Hughes said.
Jack Hughes of the United States celebrates after a gold medal win during against Canadaat Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games Feb. 22, 2026, in Milan, Italy. (Elsa/Getty Images)
Hughes then appeared to address the recent criticism of his team for its response to Trump’s joke.
“Like all these people talking, how many of them watched their gold medal game? Me and Quinn Hughes were at the game. We were at the game until like overtime ended on the glass, and we were jumping up and down so excited for these girls, so excited they won,” Hughes said.
“And how many of these people watched the gold medal game, watched their semifinals game? Like 10 of the 10 of our players went to their game in the round-robin. Like, we supported them so much, and we’re so proud of them. We’re so happy that they won, and they brought a gold medal back and that, you know, I said it, the men’s and women’s team both brought gold medals back. So, just unbelievable for USA hockey.”
Hughes, who scored the game-winning overtime goal against Canada to win gold, reflected on his interaction with the player on the U.S. women’s team who did the same, Megan Keller.
“Me and her had a great moment in the cafeteria after her gold medal game. We played Slovakia the next night, and it was like a late game. And we were in the pasta line — me and Megan. They were just getting ready to go out again, and I just gave her a massive hug, and I said, ‘I’m so happy for you. I’m so proud of you,’” Hughes said.
“A couple nights later, saw her again in the [cafeteria], and we took a great picture and, uh, she just gave me a big hug and was so pumped for me as well.”
Hughes told reporters after the game the first thing he thought about when the puck went in was Keller, who scored the golden goal for the United States women’s team against Canada three days earlier.
US WOMEN’S HOCKEY GOLD MEDALIST SAYS IT’S ‘SAD’ MEN’S TEAM HAD TO APOLOGIZE FOR OLYMPICS CONTROVERSY
The controversy surrounding the men’s team stemmed from a locker room phone call between the players and Trump right after their gold medal win over Canada.
Trump told the men’s team after inviting them to Tuesday’s State of the Union address that he’d “have” to invite the women’s team, otherwise “I probably would be impeached.” The team laughed in response, prompting immense backlash.
Several mainstream media outlets penned op-eds condemning the men’s team for laughing at the joke and then visiting the White House to celebrate and Trump’s State of the Union address.
The United States’ Jack Hughes (86), who scored the winning overtime goal, celebrates after defeating Canada in the men’s ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
U.S. women’s hockey captain Hilary Knight said on Wednesday’s edition of ESPN’s “SportsCenter” that Trump’s “distasteful joke” has “overshadow[ed]” the women’s success.
“I thought it was sort of a distasteful joke, and, unfortunately, that is overshadowing a lot of the success, the success of just women at the Olympics carrying for Team USA and having amazing gold medal feats,” Knight said.
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“We’re just focusing on celebrating the women in our room, the extraordinary efforts, and continue to celebrate three gold medals in program history as well as the double gold for both men’s and women’s at the same time. And really not detract from that with a distasteful joke.”
Hughes’ mother, Ellen, a former Team USA player and current player development staff member, said the players only cared about “bring[ing] so much unity to a group and to a country.”
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