Recently, after Luka Modric left Real Madrid to join AC Milan, the fact that the Royal team's official account stopped tracking the Croatian midfielder quickly became a topic of discussion. Many people continue to accidentally summarize the Royal team, focusing on the matter of "pulling up the lemon and shelling it" - a phrase that has become a prejudice that eats deep into every time a certain villain leaves.
But we need to be more calm. Look at the incident from a professional and practical perspective. First, social media is a communication tool and all of its actions do not necessarily fully or accurately reflect the relationship between the parties - especially in a top-notch football environment where professionalism is a top priority.
Once a player has left the team, stopping tracking can simply be a system update, a way to maintain a clear, clear image between the "family" and the " departed person". That is not a cold war declaration, nor is it a denial of each other's merits.
Real Madrid may no longer follow Modric on social media, but that cannot erase 13 years of dedication, classy passes and moments when the Croatian midfielder made history with the white team at the Bernabeu and many other regions in Europe or around the world.
Emotions are a part of football, but professionalism always needs to be put first. It is unfair to ask a club to keep the same fans' emotions. On the contrary, it is the separation between emotions and work that shows their professionalism.
Football is a career. And when it is a profession, every decision - even an unfollow - should be viewed as a technical step rather than emotional. People in the investigation understand that. So why are outsiders so quick to judge?
For fun, to increase interaction? Not many of us have unfollow a certain page, someone - sometimes even an ex-lover. Because we don't like it, because we are angry, or for whatever reason, that is the reflection of a relationship, where we don't have to judge ourselves! ?