I wonder what is thinking at this moment. Could it even be: "I wish I was back at Anfield?"
You never know. The English media gave him a tough time during his last six months on Merseyside, some would say deservedly so, but the Italian media have quickly picked up where their counterparts on the other side of Europe have left off.
The headline in after their flaccid was not the most vicious but perhaps was the most telling, 'InterRotta' - interrupted.
It was a nice play on words which suggested that the expectations that Benitez would carry straight on from where Jose Mourinho had left off a few months before, when in the Santiago Bernabeu stadium to lift Europe's top prize after a 45 year wait, had been cruelly dashed.
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Last week's took Real Madrid's spending this summer to 74m euros (£60.8m), a not inconsiderable amount even by the extravagant standards of fellow European high rollers Manchester City.
Clearly, is once again hoping that success can be bought.
In addition to Ozil, Perez has lavished his money far and wide, purchasing Argentine winger Angel di Maria from Benfica, Ozil's compatriot Sami Khedira from Stuttgart, Portuguese defender Ricardo Carvalho from Chelsea as well as, and making a rather shorter journey than his fellow newcomers, Pedro Leon from Getafe.
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German football is rarely in the doldrums but it is definitely on a high at the moment.
The national team won many admirers in finishing , while in eight years, the feats of the domestic league and cup winners helping the country leapfrog Italy into third place in the .
German officials also proudly claim that the is the world's number one football league on the basis of an average attendance of 41,802 fans per game last season.
Among all sports, only cricket's gue and the American football's top that figure on a weekly basis - and neither competition has as many teams or matches across the course of a season.
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The dust has finally settled on Spain's post-World Cup celebrations.
The bunting has come down, the litter finally cleared away from the banks of the Manzanares where more than half-a-million people welcomed the team on the their return to Spain and most hangovers have receded, even if many football fans across the country are still walking around with smiles on their faces.
So this seems like a good moment to ask, where do Vicente Del Bosque and his merry men go from here? Mexico is the initial answer.
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