What stands out most is the repeated theme of support for coaches. If the club undercuts authority whenever tensions rise, it becomes very hard to build collective discipline.
At Real Madrid, one bad year gets scrutiny and two gets panic. That part is normal. But the panic usually becomes dangerous when it leads to more headline chasing instead of targeted fixes.
If the club wants to recover quickly, the biggest priority is not another superstar. It is restoring balance between midfield control, defensive reliability and clear attacking roles.