Jean-Luc Godard, the recently deceased film director, once said that “what matters is how you look and not what you look at”, referring to the framing of the camera, its pausing, the feel of the scene in raise what you are focusing on. In San Mamés, many times we have to act like the French genius of the “nouvelle vague”, and forget what we see, to prioritize the love of colors, tradition and the typical “we make what we have”. coaches use as an excuse. That is, we are left with how we see it: in the glasses of feeling.
Against Rayo, Athletic was a storm. This time, yes, what was seen, was also amazing. Speed surpassed Lightning, though it seemed like a contradiction. The Williams they broke the records established between a biped and a ball in transit through a field.
And they did not fail to stop at the time of the murder, as in the novels of other dead artists of the week, Javier Marias. The faithful follower of merengue, the author of “Tomorrow in the battle think of me” and eternal candidate for the Nobel Prize, the writer who knows best how to control time until it stops on its pages. The Williams, it is said, they sin in haste. On Saturday, his pace was paused. The key is in the relationship between vertigo and pause.
And by the way, the deceased Isabel II, another ‘artist’, -we’ve had very few weeks- endured 15 prime ministers in her long life, but Athletic never saw her in the Second.
Source: La Verdad

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.