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It’s no longer the Barca-Real show

MADRID — Champions Barcelona begin their bid for a sixth La Liga title in eight years against Athletic Bilbao on Sunday (Monday morning, Singapore time) knowing that fellow heavyweights Real Madrid could, unusually, be just one of several challengers for their crown.

Europa League champions Sevilla (in white) gave Barca a mighty scare earlier this month. Barca eventually took home the  European Super Cup with a 5-4 win. Photo: Getty Images

Europa League champions Sevilla (in white) gave Barca a mighty scare earlier this month. Barca eventually took home the European Super Cup with a 5-4 win. Photo: Getty Images

MADRID — Champions Barcelona begin their bid for a sixth La Liga title in eight years against Athletic Bilbao on Sunday (Monday morning, Singapore time) knowing that fellow heavyweights Real Madrid could, unusually, be just one of several challengers for their crown.

Under new coach Rafa Benitez, Real are desperate to recover from a 2014-15 season when they failed to win major silverware, and will be looking to FIFA Ballon d’Or holder Cristiano Ronaldo to break more scoring records and hoping world record-signing Gareth Bale can rediscover his best form.

Atletico Madrid proved they are genuine contenders by winning Spain’s top flight in 2013-14. Inspirational Argentine coach Diego Simeone has overseen some canny business in the latest transfer window, including luring Colombia striker Jackson Martinez from Porto.

And it would be no great surprise if Valencia, flush with cash following last year’s takeover by Singapore billionaire Peter Lim, and Europa League champions Sevilla, who gave Barca a mighty scare in this month’s European Super Cup, are in the mix at the top of the table come May. Valencia are also on track for a return to the Champions League after a 3-1 win over Monaco on Wednesday in the first-leg playoff for Europe’s top-tier tournament.

“In Spain we don’t just have Barcelona,” Benitez told daily El Pais this week.

“There is Atletico, Valencia, Sevilla, who are all performing very well,” added the much-travelled 55-year-old, who began his coaching career in Real’s academy after his nascent playing career was ended by injury.

“But it’s true that Barcelona are the champions and the reference point.”

Bilbao showed Barca are vulnerable when they thrashed them 4-0 in the first leg of the Spanish Super Cup last week, going on to seal a 5-1 aggregate success in the return on Monday. The pressure on the Catalan club to match last term’s haul of Champions League, La Liga and King’s Cup titles will be immense.

Much will depend on the form of talismanic forward Lionel Messi who, with strike partners Neymar and Luis Suarez, rattled in a Spanish record 122 goals in all competitions last term.

Andalusian rivals Sevilla and Malaga get the new season under way tonight when they clash at the Rosaleda, before Atletico host promoted Las Palmas and before Valencia play at Rayo Vallecano on Saturday. After Barca play at Bilbao on Sunday, Real are at another promoted side, Sporting Gijon, and second-division champions Real Betis host Villarreal.

However, fans in Singapore will not be able to catch the action live on their television sets, as The New Paper reported on Thursday that Fox Sports Asia — which had owned the local rights to the La Liga since 2012 — was not successful in winning the rights for this season. The report said that the Asian rights were won by beIN Sports, which does not have a channel in Singapore. AGENCIES

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