When Kylian Mbappé approached Real Madrid in July to tell them he wanted to inherit Luka Modric's No. 10 shirt, both club president Florentino Pérez and Adidas licked their lips lasciviously.
It was a marketing and sales windfall. Dollar signs flashed. But Xabi Alonso's reaction was slightly different, slightly more nuanced.
He told his superstar, with whom he's forging a promising new relationship, that the shirt number came with responsibilities -- not just romanticism and commercialism. Alonso warned Mbappé that Modric had worn the shirt with dignity for the past seven years not only because of his performances on the pitch, but because of his attitude, behavior, dignity and those extras he gave to the club, the squad and the team.
"Do you still want it?" was the implicit challenge.
Mbappé's response since swapping out his one-season No. 9 shirt has been impeccable. On the pitch, his third goal in two LaLiga matches -- a brace in the 3-0 win at Real Oviedo on Sunday -- is business as usual for the 26-year-old who, with 44 goals last season, established himself as the most prolific debutant in Madrid's long, stellar history. (Mbappé also hit two in Madrid's only preseason friendly, for what it's worth.)
Commercially, too, things have combusted precisely as Adidas and President Pérez expected. Fermín de la Calle, a reputable writer for Diario Sport, reported (citing Euromericas Sport Marketing) that 345,000 Mbappé No. 10 shirts were immediately snapped up, making millions for Adidas and vastly underlining Real Madrid's value as a client for the German company.
Coach and player have both sung from the same hymn sheet on the subject. After beating Osasuna, Alonso admitted, unable to hide a really satisfied grin: "After a terrific first year at Madrid, where he did so many good things, I think Kylian wants more. Whether that's because of his change of shirt number or simply his hunger and ambition to win ... I'm clear that he thinks he can perform even better -- individually, for the collective and inspire those around him. If his choice of the No. 10 helps all that happen, fantastic. He's a player who generates different moves but the thing is how often they are decisive"
The Frenchman's take: "The No. 10 carries huge importance at this club, but I think the No. 9 did, too. I'm feeling great right now, but the most important thing is helping my team offensively and defensively. Things will follow from that because with this good spirit they were showing, we're going to keep winning games."
And, really, there lies the acid test.
Mbappé has always been a synonym for goal scoring. Previous coaches, most notably Luis Enrique at Paris Saint-Germain, have tried to add the final element to his repertoire. The part that makes you truly great, the part that makes you indomitable, the part that often the showy players don't want to know about. The ugly work, the pressing, the tracking back -- the blue-collar stuff that aristocrats have always sneered at.
I hope that you regular readers of this ESPN FC column are as realistic, and sometimes cynical, as me. So let's not go overboard.
Up in Oviedo on Sunday, we didn't suddenly witness an all-in performance from Mbappé in which he sweated through the club badge chasing and harassing every home player, snarling into tackles and suddenly morphing into the complete all-round footballer.
He's waited eight years to wear the No. 10 shirt at club level. He was allowed to do that only twice for AS Monaco, and then had to wait for Neymar to move at PSG before it became available in the French capital, but that was then gifted to Ousmane Dembélé.
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