Vinicius Jr. Casemiro Luka Modric Carlo Ancelotti Real Madrid 2022-23 GFXGetty

Inside Real Madrid's malaise: From Casemiro's exit to Vinicius' World Cup hangover

"We are Real Madrid," Carlo Ancelotti defiantly declared after his side lost the Spanish Super Cup final to Barcelona on Sunday.

His team had just been handily beaten 3-1 by their biggest rivals, thoroughly outplayed in a Clasico that appeared to signal a shift in power.

The veteran manager's statement was one of reassertion, even assurance. And in a sense, Ancelotti is right. Real Madrid are so used to success that even the smallest of blips are made to look catastrophic. They are not La Liga's newest "crisis club".

But they have looked strangely beatable since the World Cup. Indeed, Madrid have only won two of their last five games in normal time, and even in victory have been far from convincing.

Fatigue is certainly a factor but it is not the only explanation. There are other issues at play here.

Madrid let defensive midfield stalwart Casemiro leave last summer, and his ferocity and bite are certainly being missed.

Meanwhile, Karim Benzema has struggled for both form and fitness since being forced to pull out of France's campaign in Qatar.

However, it's not even solely a question of personnel. Some of Madrid's problems run deeper than that, as GOAL outlines below...

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