AFP/File / Glyn KIRK
Real Madrid players hold
the trophy after winning the UEFA Champions League final match against
Juventus, at The Principality Stadium in Cardiff, south Wales, on June
3, 2017
Real made a profit of over 75 million euros ($90 million) in the transfer market thanks to the departures of Alvaro Morata, James Rodriguez and Danilo.
Yet they remain very much the side to beat as the Champions League returns on Tuesday having ended a near three-decade long wait for a team to retain the trophy.
Madrid coped with that challenge admirably last season, dismissing Bayern Munich, Atletico Madrid and Juventus in the latter stages.
Their quest to become the first side since Bayern in the mid-seventies to win three in a row starts with a more modest test in the form of APOEL Nicosia at the Santiago Bernabeu on Wednesday.
GETTY/AFP/File / JONATHAN DANIEL
Theo Hernandez of Real
Madrid controls the ball during the 2017 MLS All-Star Game at Soldier
Field in Chicago, Illinois, on August 2, 2017
Dortmund even beat Madrid to top spot in the group stage last season. But Real have mastered the art of saving their best for when the competition really gets going for the contenders in the knockout stages in the new year.
"We have a stupendous squad but this is a competition that takes you to the limit in all aspects," added Butragueno.
- Strength in depth -
Real's strength in depth was used intelligently by coach Zinedine Zidane to win the club's first La Liga and European Cup double for 59 years last season.
AFP/File / PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU
Real Madrid's strength in
depth was used intelligently by coach Zinedine Zidane to win the club's
first La Liga and European Cup double for 59 years last season
Instead, Real continued their policy of snapping up the best young talent in Spain in Theo Hernandez and Dani Ceballos to add to the likes of Isco and Marco Asensio.
Despite a slow start to their campaign in La Liga, Zidane already seems to be playing the long game this season.
"I am not going to revolutionise what I want to do with this team due to one bad game," Zidane insisted afterwards.
Real will be bolstered for the visit of the Cypriot champions in midweek by the return of Cristiano Ronaldo.
The World Player of the Year's absence due to a five-game domestic ban for pushing a referee has exposed the one flaw in Real's squad in a lack of back-up to Karim Benzema.
Having not replaced Morata, Bale was forced to act as an auxiliary striker against Levante after Benzema went off injured.
Yet even an enforced rest for Ronaldo could ultimately work in Real's favour come the end of the campaign.
The Portuguese scored 10 goals from the quarter-finals on last season as Zidane's rotation policy left him far fresher and freer of injuries than in previous years.
With a fit Ronaldo come the knockout stages, Real will remain the team to beat as the rest of Europe tries to end their hegemony.







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