The time has come again. Millions of people across the globe have gathered with their loved ones to give gifts, indulge, and commemorate the birth of a mysterious carpenter. In the city of Seville, however, they have been celebrating two Jesuses this year.
By Alex Roberts
Jesús Navas has called it quits on his long an illustrious career at the ripe old age of 39. He leaves the game a Bonafide Sevilla legend, helping his boyhood club win four Europa Leagues, two Copa del Reys, a UEFA Super Cup, and a Spanish Super Cup.
Born in Los Palacios, 15 minutes south of Seville, a small skinny boy first walked into Sevilla’s training ground in 2000, dreaming of simply being good enough to represent the club he loves. The stadium in that very same facility is named after him now.
He made his debut in November 2003, two days after his 19th birthday, in a 1-0 defeat to Espanyol in LaLiga. He may not have won the game for Sevilla in the end, but his immense talent was clearly evident.
Sevilla hadn’t won a trophy in 50 years at that point and the club were in danger of falling into further irrelevance. By the time Navas left, he had played the second most games in the club’s history, with 393, 27 behind Juan Arza Iñigo in first with 419, and emphatically ended their trophy drought.
The winger had scored in a Copa del Rey final and won two UEFA Cups, the competition that Sevilla would soon become synonymous with. Unfortunately, their success on the pitch didn’t translate to success off it.
Chelsea courted him back in 2006, but he couldn’t bear to leave his beloved Sevilla, turning them down, citing anxiety attacks due to homesickness as the reason.
In the most romantic version of this story, Navas would have spent his entire career at Sevilla, but modern football has no time for such things. In 2013, ten years after making his debut, the club were in dire financial straits, and he reluctantly accepted a move away to help.
Man City came calling and Navas made the move from sunny Seville to not so sunny Manchester. The Premier League club’s vast wealth helped keep the lights on at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán stadium but at the cost of the club’s very soul.
Navas enjoyed his time in Manchester, adapting his game and becoming a wing-back after initially struggling to contend with the more physical Premier League defenders. He would go on to become a key player for Manuel Pellegrini, winning his first league title, along with two League Cups.
Three years flew by before Pellegrini was eventually replaced by Pep Guardiola. The legendary coach persisted with Navas for a season, but he soon become surplus to requirements when Kyle Walker was signed from Tottenham in the summer of 2017.
The Spaniard left City as a free agent with 183 appearances, eight goals, and 35 assists under his belt. He may not have been prolific in front of goal, but his industry and never-say-die attitude endeared him to the Etihad faithful.
As soon as he left, Navas had his heart and mind set on a return to Sevilla and to his city. It finally materialised on August 1st, 2017, signing a four-year deal, and he hasn’t looked back since.
As age caught up with him, things got harder for Navas. He has an arthritic hip that causes him pain whenever he plays, trains, or even walks. Still, he played through it, sacrificing his body for the club he loves.
By the end of his first season back, he had overtaken Iñigo to become the club’s record appearance maker, helping them secure a Europa League spot and a place in the Copa del Rey final, which they ultimately lost 5-0 to Barcelona, all done under three separate managers.
The next season was relatively successful too. Sevilla made it to the business end of Spain’s domestic cups, once again falling to Barcelona in a cup final, although this time it was 2-1 in the Supercopa de España.
Navas would go on to captain Sevilla to three consecutive top four finishes, securing Champions League football and much-needed funds under Julen Lopetegui but the proverbial cherry on top of the cake came in the form of the 2022-23 Europa League trophy.
Sevilla didn’t have an easy run to the final, they would have to beat PSV, Fenerbahce, Man United, and Juventus before facing José Mourinho’s Roma in Budapest.
The Italians took the lead in the 35th-minute through Paulo Dybala before a Gianluca Mancini own-goal levelled things up. Full-time came and went, so did extra-time, the final would have to be decided by penalties.
What followed was arguably the worst set of spot-kicks from a single side in a major European final. Roma missed two penalties, and it ended 4-1 to Sevilla, earning them a record seventh title, with Navas being named the Player of the Tournament.
From the highest of highs come the lowest of lows, and things have soured at Sevilla since their last Europa League win. Lopetegui was sacked in October 2022, and the club have finished 12th and 14th in the two seasons since.
Losing their most successful player is the latest in a long line of blows for Sevilla, but it was the right thing to do.
Few opposition players have received a standing ovation from the home support at the Santiago Bernabéu and now Navas can count himself alongside the likes of Ronaldinho and Diego Maradona.
Navas left the pitch in tears, not because Sevilla had lost 4-2, but because it was the end. Long live the second most successful Jesus in Spanish history.
(Cover image from IMAGO)
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