Saul Niguez says the quiet parts out loud about Joao Felix and Atletico Madrid
New Flamengo signing Saul Niguez has brought to an end 17 years at Atletico Madrid, the club he came through at, and spent his entire career with, excepting three loan spells with Rayo Vallecano, Chelsea and Sevilla. After terminating his deal with Atletico, the 30-year-old is starting afresh in Brazil.
However he did not leave without some honest reflections on his time at Atletico. Initially emerging as the great hope for Atletico in midfield, recent years have soured his career in the Spanish capital somewhat, with his sizable salary proving problematic for Los Rojiblancos.
Relationship with Diego Simeone
Certainly during the latter half of his career, there was plenty of talk of a rift between Saul and manager Diego Simeone. The former was unhappy with being played out of what he felt was his best position, while Simeone was felt justified in not giving him the reins. Yet El Cholo came out in a good light in an interview with Cadena Cope.
đ«đ·â€ïž Thomas Lemar: "Hello AtlĂ©ticos, well, today itâs my turn to say goodbye to you. I wanted to make this message to thank everyone; the club, my teammates, the coaching staff, the medical team, and you, the fans, who supported me a lot during the good times and the moreâŠ
â Atletico Universe (@atletiuniverse) July 31, 2025
âMy relationship with Simeone had its ups and downs, but he was always direct, not fake like some others at the club. He may have been a little more distant as a coach, but everything he said to me was always to my face. In my last conversation with him at the Sanchez-Pizjuan, he told me he wasnât counting on me for the following season. I think it was a very good conversation because in the end, people thought I was going to complain about anything, but in the end, it was the opposite.â
âFewer and fewer excusesâ at Atletico Madrid
It has been a second summer of big spending at the Metropolitano, with six new faces arriving at Atletico, so far for a total of âŹ153m excluding variables, after a âŹ190m spending spree last summer. A number of Atletico players have declared that they are aiming for titles this season, and Saul said there is little excuse not to do so.
âThey have fewer and fewer excuses. Last year they spent âŹ200m, and this year theyâve paid another âŹ200m. Now the reality is different. Theyâre already spending the same as other clubs, and they have to compete for everything. Last year wasnât as bad as some people make it out to be. It was a year they came close to winning and didnât. As long as Choloâs message continues to resonate with the players, I think heâs got a long way to go.â

Joao Felix issue is work-rate
Of course Atletico Madridâs biggest ever outlay was on Joao Felix, and after the âŹ129m outlay on the Portuguese talent, the pandemic hit, and a period of austerity followed. Initially Simeone was blamed by a section of the media for not getting the best out of him, but the narrative has shifted the responsibility to Felix himself. Saul as good as confirmed his work ethic was right to frustrate Simeone.
âJoao has all the qualities to be an incredible player, but no matter how good you are, if you donât work, itâs worthless⊠I heard a phrase from Paco Jemez that said that talent without work is nothing⊠Many of us have tried to help Joao, but if you donât want toâŠâ

This summer Felix completed his fourth move in the space of two years, after spells at Barcelona, AC Milan, Chelsea and Al-Nassr. The latter two moves totalled âŹ82m in fees too, but at 25, has started just 43 times in the last two seasons, losing his spot at all three European teams.
Saul also explained in his interview that the âpersonal stuffâ that got in the way of his move to Trabzonspor was down to finally reasons, citing the fact that he wouldâve gone alone to Turkiye. His wife is pregnant and the adaptation to Rio de Janeiro was deemed easier for his family due to the food, language and climate.