Bank manager taking credit for Mirandes run

Bank manager taking credit for Mirandes run

MADRID - Reuters

Mirandes’ Pablo Infante celebrates with fans after eliminating Espanyol from the King’s Cup. Infante is a semi-professional player with a full-time job at a bank. AP photo

Balding bank manager Pablo Infante has outscored Lionel Messi to fire tiny Mirandes into a King’s Cup semifinal against Athletic Bilbao tonight, without skipping a day’s work at his suit-and-tie office job in northern Spain.

The 31-year-old is the Cup top scorer with seven goals, including six from their giantkilling victories over Villarreal, Racing Santander and Espanyol, and his third-tier club is on the brink of a possible final meeting with either Barcelona or Valencia.

Infante scored and set up the team’s dramatic injury-time winner to knock out Espanyol in the quarterfinals last week, and was carried off the pitch on the shoulders of ecstatic fans.
A few hours later, he was opening the doors to his bank at 8 a.m. with television cameras waiting to greet him.

Infante has become the unlikely hero of Mirandes’s fairy-tale Cup run, which has been all the more impressive as they have beaten top-flight sides over two legs three times.

The fact Infante has to dash back from the away legs in his car overnight to be back in time for his day job has caught the imagination of the country.

“I’m here seven hours a day, 8 until 3. It’s in the afternoon when I immerse myself in my other job,” Infante told regional newspaper Deia.

“This media attention is down to the work of everyone at the club. I’ve perhaps received the most attention, but I take it the same as everything else, calmly.

“I understand this is a business, that when things go well you are on a real high, but when they go badly you are criticiszed and brought back down to earth.”

Tonight’s first leg is in the small industrial town of Miranda de Ebro, population 40,000, where the club operating on a budget of 1.2 million euros is in the last four for the first time to take on the 23-time winner Bilbao, who has an annual budget of around 60 million.

Bilbao is sixth in La Liga, boasts two Spanish World Cup winners in Fernando Llorente and Javi Martinez, and is coached by Argentine Marcelo Bielsa.

“We know they are favorites,” Infante added. “I would say it is a 99 percent chance for them to win and one percent for us, but we have hope and enthusiasm and won’t give it up easily.”

The second semi sees Barcelona visit Valencia tomorrow, with Pep Guardiola’s side suffering an injury crisis with David Villa and Andres Iniesta ruled out, and Pedro and Alexis Sanchez doubtful.