Carlos Sainz: Win the Dakar, (hopefully) visit La Moncloa | Sports

Carlos Sainz called Pedro Sánchez an asshole days ago in a chat with motorsport gentlemen in which two other terms were interspersed: “cojones” and “Catalan situation”. It’s a shame that that conversation wasn’t recorded for at least a couple more minutes because other delicious mud comes from that mud, and I could bet you a beer and a tortilla skewer that other things are mentioned, like some good lady. See, some jokes about homosexuals and dwarfs and so on until Alfonso Guerra gets the nirvana he deserves.

The fact is that the driver has won his fourth Dakar at the age of 61 and one imagined that Pedro Sánchez would take revenge by receiving him in Moncloa with the Davos hat and the car with which he rose from the political dead to ask him for a little ride. through the palace gardens.

But not. He has only posted a message on Everything is joy for the Spanish heroes. Congratulations.

The victory of Sainz – who stood in the candidacy of Juan Manuel Villar Mir to preside over Real Madrid in another of those wonderful moments in the history of our country – cannot be tarnished by this unimportant video, and confirms one of the errors chronic problems of this country, that of giving importance to the political opinions of people who are dedicated to something else, being, as in this case, very good at what they do. Has anyone ever asked Sánchez about the cinematography of a film or if he considers motor sports a bit meh Because they depend excessively on the quality of the machine in question and not so much on who drives it?

No one is safe from a private conversation where they usually say stupid things that are noticeably more serious than calling a man “asshole” who, on the other hand, is known to be one of the most hated human beings and seems to care very little about him. And because, while we are at it, it is very likely that there is not a right-wing man left who has not called Sánchez an asshole, just as there is no leftist alive who has not said something similar about Isabel Natividad Díaz-Ayuso.

All of this makes me very happy because apart from being happy about Sainz’s victory, it has allowed me to remember that time when our Dakar winner said that José Luis Martínez-Almeida measures up, something that he cannot say about others, or some than another article in which the “Matador” is praised – a fantasy of a nickname, on the other hand – and his entire family as a whole, in which of course all the women are cannons and ideals and “with strong character.” And another in which it is ugly that Perro took so long to bark in

Some joke occurred to me about the opposition leader’s vital exhaustion, but I better keep quiet. In short, in this country you can no longer say anything. Let them tell Guerra.

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