Getafe’s historic season: Bordalás calls 44 points a ‘milestone’ after 0-2 loss to Rayo Vallecano
Getafe’s historic season remains intact despite a 0-2 home defeat to Rayo Vallecano, manager José Bordalás said after Sunday’s match, pointing to the club’s 44 points with four LaLiga fixtures remaining. Bordalás described the total as a "historic milestone" for a side that scraped clear of the relegation zone earlier this year. The coach underlined the contrast between the team’s struggles in January and the stability it has built heading into the final stretch of the season.
Bordalás hails 44 points as a ‘historic milestone’
José Bordalás framed Getafe’s current position as exceptional given the circumstances the club has navigated this season. Speaking after the 0-2 loss to Rayo Vallecano, he emphasized that the tally of 44 points, with four rounds left, represents the greatest difficulty overcome in his time at the club. Bordalás said nothing would distract him from recognizing the significance of the achievement for players, staff and supporters.
He listed a string of challenges the team has faced, including injuries, a stretched squad and off-field disruptions that have complicated preparations. Those factors, he argued, magnified the importance of reaching this points total so late in the campaign. The manager insisted the defeat did not erase the collective work that produced the recovery from early-season peril.
From relegation scrap in January to current safety cushion
Getafe’s turnaround began after a perilous January when the side hovered just one point above the Segunda División places. A sequence of results and defensive improvements helped the team climb away from danger and accumulate enough points to look close to survival with only a few matches to play. That ascent has altered the narrative around the campaign, shifting it from potential relegation to one of resilience and recovery.
Bordalás repeatedly asked that the season be judged in its entirety rather than by a single result, pointing to the standings and the quality of clubs still embroiled in the relegation battle. He noted that several traditional LaLiga names remain in danger, underscoring the competitiveness at the lower end of the table. That context, he said, enhances the value of Getafe’s position as the season winds down.
Injury toll and heavy minutes strain core midfielders
A central theme in Bordalás’s assessment was the physical toll on his squad, particularly on midfielders Mauro Arambarri and Luis Milla. Both have logged heavy minutes across two seasons and the coach believes that extended playing time has left its mark on their bodies and on the team’s options. Bordalás highlighted that, unlike some rivals, Getafe has had limited capacity to rotate and rest key figures.
The manager pointed to a combination of injuries and a compact roster as a factor that forced repeated reliance on the same starters. That reliance made it harder to maintain freshness during tight run-ins and to respond tactically at crucial moments in matches. He praised the professionalism of the often-deployed players while noting the practical limitations a coach faces when the squad lacks depth.
Key errors and refereeing moments decided the match
In the immediate analysis of the game against Rayo Vallecano, Bordalás attributed the loss to lapses in concentration and costly defensive mistakes. He described the opening goal as the product of a breakdown in marking that mirrored a prior concession the club had experienced against Barcelona. The second goal, he said, stemmed from a moment when a Rayo forward used physicality to gain advantage, a situation Getafe could not afford.
Bordalás also referenced a penalty incident that he felt might have altered the match’s complexion had it been awarded, suggesting that a different decision could have given his side a route back into the contest. He criticized the frequency of stoppages and time-wasting by the opponent but framed those elements as part of modern football tactics rather than grounds for complaint. The coach urged fair treatment for Getafe when decisions go against them, insisting consistency is essential.
Europa ambitions tempered by squad limitations
Questions about whether Getafe should be entertaining thoughts of European qualification drew a measured response from Bordalás. He acknowledged that talk of continental competition is natural among supporters and within the club because the run of results has created positive momentum. However, he cautioned that the practical chances must be weighed against the squad’s capacity and the comparative resources of rivals.
Bordalás noted that other teams have been able to rest players and manage workloads in ways Getafe could not, and that reality shapes both expectations and outcomes. He stressed that while the ambition is shared, the focus remains on securing the necessary points to finish the season safely. The coach framed the remainder of the campaign as an opportunity to consolidate the gains rather than chase speculative objectives.
Mayoral returns after five months; late-season role
One positive from the matchday was the return of Borja Mayoral to competitive action after a five-month layoff caused by a knee injury. Bordalás expressed relief and satisfaction at seeing the striker back on the pitch, noting Mayoral’s difficult period of two surgeries and extended recovery. The manager suggested that even limited minutes from the forward could be valuable as the team approaches the closing fixtures.
Mayoral’s comeback offers tactical options and adds weight to the matchday squad, but Bordalás was careful not to overstate the immediate impact. He emphasized managing the player’s minutes judiciously given the season’s final phase and the need to protect him from setbacks. The coach framed the forward’s return as a morale boost for the dressing room and a practical reinforcement for the bench.
Getafe’s season will now be measured across the remaining four matches, with attention focused on consolidating the points that Bordalás has called historic. The defeat to Rayo Vallecano represents a setback but not a reversal of the broader progress the club has achieved since the winter. With injuries easing and some players returning, Getafe enters the final stretch aiming to translate resilience into a secure finish and perhaps exceed the expectations set earlier in the campaign.










