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Browsing: Madrids
Oct 26, 2025, 02:04 PM ET
MADRID — Kylian Mbappé and Jude Bellingham struck in the first half as Real Madrid beat Barcelona 2-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu on Sunday to stretch their lead over their Clásico rivals at the top of LaLiga to five points.
FermÃn López had briefly canceled out Mbappé’s opener in the 38th minute of an incident-packed game only for Bellingham to net the eventual winner five minutes later as Madrid ended a four-match losing streak against Barça. It could have been more, too, with Wojciech Szczesny saving a second-half penalty from Mbappé, while Madrid also had three goals chalked off for offside.
Barça tried to rally late but, other than a Jules Koundé chance that he could not quite control, they never looked like troubling the home side. The game ended in a brawl between players and staff on and off the pitch after Pedri‘s late red card for a second booking sent temperatures soaring. — Sam Marsden
Alonso turns Clásico tide with statement win
Xabi Alonso needed this. There have been plenty of signs of improvement since the coach took over from Carlo Ancelotti in the summer, but in the really high-profile games, Alonso’s Real Madrid had fallen short: beaten 4-0 by Paris Saint-Germain in the Club World Cup semifinals and 5-2 by Atlético Madrid a month ago in the Madrid derby.
Now, Alonso has his first signature win, and in the game that matters most to Madrid. Last season’s quartet of defeats to Barça were the clearest signpost that the Ancelotti era was ending — it wasn’t just that Madrid lost all four, it was the scale of those losses, with an aggregate score of 16-7 — and Sunday’s result, and performance, is a statement of intent.
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Madrid played with intensity, aggression and cohesion, disrupting Barça’s buildup as they frequently pressed goalkeeper Szczesny and center backs Pau Cubarsà and Eric GarcÃa. Alonso’s decision to pick an extra midfielder, sacrificing a wide player, worked, as Bellingham and Eduardo Camavinga joined Aurélien Tchouaméni and Arda Güler in a 4-4-2 when out of possession.
There are still challenges for Alonso, notably how to handle VinÃcius Júnior, who reacted so vehemently to being substituted in the 72nd minute, in a very public show of dissent. And there were moments when Madrid’s defense looked vulnerable, even if Barça struggled to create clear-cut chances.
Overall, this was the first performance — on the biggest stage — that Alonso can point to as concrete evidence of real progress, even though he’ll insist that they’re still just getting started. — Alex Kirkland
Barça defense looks outclassed on biggest stage
The focus is often on Barça’s high line, but if they can’t defend seriously, it doesn’t matter how far up the pitch the back four place themselves. The defending throughout this game was far too lackluster for a fixture of this intensity.
Alejandro Balde played Mbappé onside for the first goal and Bellingham was left unmarked to tap in the second after Balde had been beaten too easily in the air by Éder Militão. Beyond the goals, Koundé was too passive defending VinÃcius one-on-one, and there are still questions about the center-back pairing of GarcÃa, who was unfortunate in giving away the penalty missed by Mbappé, and CubarsÃ. It doesn’t have the feel of a long-term partnership at this level.
Following the big loss of Iñigo MartÃnez in the summer, many thought Flick would go with Cubarsà and Ronald Araújo as his pairing in the middle of the backline. But the selection of GarcÃa, who has been good this season, here was further proof of the German coach’s preferred partnership. The thinking is that they are the duo that give Barça the most on the ball, but the bigger question is whether they offer more than they take away when Barça have to defend against the very best forwards in the world. — Marsden
Mbappé at the center of everything
Mbappé ended up scoring a respectable five Clásico goals last season, but he still needed to exorcise some demons from the Sunday’s game at the Bernabéu, where his debut Clásico saw him caught offside a career-high eight times, without scoring, as Barça won 4-0. There’s no doubt this was a significant improvement on that showing, even if it wasn’t a perfect game from Mbappé, given his second-half penalty miss.
Kylian Mbappé scored the first goal in Real Madrid’s 2-1 win over Barcelona on Sunday in the Spanish capital. Alberto Gardin/NurPhoto via Getty Images
A dream start in the 12th minute — thrashing the ball into the net from distance, with the sweetest of finishes — was denied by a VAR check, which revealed Mbappé had been fractionally offside. Undeterred, he scored 10 minutes later, to make it 16 goals in all competitions this season, and 11 in LaLiga. There was no hesitation with the finish, and no doubt he’d find the net.
There was another offside goal later — clearer this time — and then a penalty, which Szczesny did extremely well to save. Mbappé was unreliable at times from the spot last season, saying he hit “rock bottom” after misses against Liverpool and Athletic Club. This season, he scored five penalties in a row, until now.
When he was substituted in the 91st minute, his stats suggested limited involvement, with the fewest touches of any player on the pitch. But the reality was very different. — Kirkland
Yamal gives Madrid plenty of reason to talk
Lamine Yamal was public enemy No. 1 at the Bernabéu after comments he made in midweek suggesting Madrid “get all the refereeing calls” and still “complain.” The remarks did not go down well with Madrid fans and his name was fiercely jeered when announced before the game. Every touch was subsequently met with whistles, from the first minute to the last.
Some of the biggest cheers came when Ãlvaro Carreras, who defended him well, got the better of him, or when he fired a second-half shot comfortably over the bar.
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Yamal has often produced his best performances when the spotlight is brightest on him. Barça assistant coach Marcus Sorg said before the game, “the criticism motivates him,” but this time he could not dig Barça out of a hole just a week after returning from a groin injury. He was later shifted into a central role, moving him away from Carreras, but it was a move that probably came a little too late.
“While I’m winning they can’t say anything,” Yamal said as Barça enjoyed Clásico domination last season. There will be plenty of talking in Madrid on Sunday night. — Marsden
Bellingham looking back to his best in Madrid
Bellingham built his Madrid reputation on defining moments in Clásicos: scoring famous, winning goals in both dramatic games with Barça in his debut campaign, 2023-24. Last season was more difficult, failing to score in any of Madrid’s four heavy defeats, his form matching the team’s struggles.
But here, there was another winning goal, and it was Bellingham’s second in a week, following the only goal of the game against Juventus on Wednesday. It was one of most straightforward goals Bellingham will ever score, a close-range tap-in, but as ever the midfielder’s knack of being in the right place at the right time shone through. Before that, there was an assist for Mbappé, too, with a trademark, perfectly executed through ball.
For Madrid to be at their best — and to compete at the highest level, in Europe as well as LaLiga — they need their best, star players to deliver. Here, Mbappé, Bellingham and VinÃcius were all important, even if VinÃcius sullied that with his reaction to being substituted. There’s work to do on exactly where Bellingham fits into Alonso’s Madrid, but here — in a midfield four, sometimes outside, sometimes switching infield — he looked comfortable.
Bellingham’s return from shoulder surgery in July has been slow and steady, and he was rushed back ahead of schedule. But now, in the past week, we’re seeing the Bellingham of his first season in Spain, and that’s very good news for Madrid. — Kirkland
Barça’s absentees doom any hope of a comeback
FermÃn was on target again after netting a hat trick in the midweek UEFA Champions League win over Olympiacos. He has a knack, not dissimilar to Frank Lampard, of arriving in the box just at the right time. That was the case here as he timed his run perfectly to meet Marcus Rashford‘s pass and level the score. His intensity is also something Barça missed when he sat out a stretch of the season through injury earlier in the campaign.
But his desire and thirst for goals, so often a positive for Barça, also cost his team in the second half. On two occasions, around the edge of the area, instead of passing, he took the shot. Both times, Thibaut Courtois saved comfortably.
Ultimately, though, it was Barça’s lack of bodies that haunted them late. They had to wait until the final 15 minutes to make a change due to a lack of attacking options on the bench. And with Robert Lewandowski, Raphinha, Gavi and Dani Olmo among those sitting out the game, it was Araújo and Marc Casadó who were tasked with trying to turn this game around. — Marsden
MADRID — On the touchline, Diego Simeone was crying. Julián Ãlvarez had just put Atletico Madrid 4-2 up against Real Madrid, curling a free kick past Thibaut Courtois to decisively shift the derby in Atletico’s favor and perhaps kickstart their season.
For Simeone, it was all too much. He rubbed his face, almost sinking to his knees, before smiling, rubbing his eyes again, and covering his face with his hands. He did his best, but there was no hiding it: these were tears, an outpouring of relief and joy, of pressure released.
In an instant, on the biggest stage, against their biggest rivals, Atletico’s difficult, demoralizing start to the season had been swept away. At the Metropolitano, they were delivering an electric, historic performance, and anything seemed possible.
It ended 5-2, and if his reaction didn’t say enough, here’s a stat: In all of Simeone’s 14 years in charge, he had never seen his team score five goals against Real Madrid in a competitive game.
“There’s a lot of emotion,” Simeone admitted afterwards, speaking to DAZN, when asked about those tears. “It’s a season that started with a lot of difficulty. There’s a lot of effort, from a lot of people behind the scenes. Their work is fantastic.”
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There was emotion, too, for Xabi Alonso. His first Madrid derby as coach ended not just in defeat, but in a painful lesson. “This defeat hurts,” he said afterwards. “We were lacking a gear.”
Until Saturday, Real’s start to the season under Alonso had been near flawless, winning every game, the team steadily growing in stature and confidence, led by Kylian Mbappé, who scored another, superb goal here, his eighth in LaLiga this season. But now, Alonso admitted: “we have to draw conclusions from what happened.”
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This kind of loss is not acceptable at Real Madrid, even for a new coach with a lot of credit, like Alonso. “We didn’t find our level,” he said.
One player who has unquestionably found his level is the derby’s MVP, Julian Alvarez, and his performance also proved that a lot can change in a week.
Last Sunday, Alvarez was sat, despondent, on the Atletico bench, hauled off early by Simeone in the team’s latest disappointing performance, a 1-1 draw at Real Mallorca. There were suggestions, later disputed by Alvarez, that he had muttered “always me” in reaction to being withdrawn by Simeone. He insisted he’d simply been frustrated with himself.
Five goals in four days later — the latest two in this derby’s second-half, a cooly converted penalty and the free kick that made Simeone cry — and Julián can’t stop smiling.
“It’s very special,” he said afterwards. “We knew how important it was. It’s a derby, and we needed the three points… Earlier in the season, we weren’t getting the results, but we were playing well. We’ve been creating more chances than any other team. Today we were more efficient.”
Simeone has frequently called Alvarez “the best player we have.” “He’s very, very good,” the coach said on Saturday. “He works hard, he’s committed. We have to look after him.”
When asked to clarify what “look after him” meant, Simeone was explicit: “we have to give him the tools to score goals.” Atletico’s collective play needs to be at the level of the team’s star.
Julian Alvarez was superb on Saturday as Atletico crushed their rivals 5-2 to reinvigorate their dour start to the 2025-26 season. Angel Martinez/Getty Images
Going into the derby, that hadn’t been the case, with nine points separating these two teams pre-match after just six LaLiga matchdays. Real were leading the way with six wins out of six. Atletico, with three draws and a loss on their record, were already mid-table. A Real Madrid win at the Metropolitano would have felt like a knockout punch. Instead, it’s Atletico whose season has been revived.
In all of Simeone’s 28 LaLiga derbies, there haven’t been many as entertaining as this. Heck, the previous three in the league had all finished 1-1. In last season’s Champions League last 16, a penalty shootout was needed to separate them. That particular night was defined by Alvarez’s slip in the shootout, a two-touch penalty, which unluckily cost Atletico the tie. It was a moment that derailed — and ended up defining — Atletico’s season, which subsequently drifted away into disappointment.
This week, Julián has had the opposite effect. On Wednesday, the team were 2-1 down to Rayo Vallecano before Alvarez scored twice in eight second-half minutes. That night ended with Simeone and Alvarez sharing a bear hug on the pitch, aware of the significance of the moment.
Then, on Saturday, Alvarez delivered again.
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And what of Alonso’s Real Madrid? They have improved since last season, looking better organized, with Mbappé in career-best form, and exciting signs from Arda Güler and Franco Mastantuono. Güler shone again on Saturday, contributing another goal and assist.
There will be more to come from Jude Bellingham, too, who looked to have been rushed into the team here — for his first start of the season — having played just 20 minutes beforehand. But this was confirmation that Madrid are far from the finished article.
“We’re in a construction phase,” Alonso said on Saturday. “This is a process.” But the scale of the defeat was stunning.
There were some, muted complaints about the referee — such as the decision not to give Alexander Sorloth a second yellow card for celebrating with fans in the stands after his first-half equalizer — but there was also no hiding from the fact that this loss was, as Alonso admitted, entirely deserved.
Madrid were not quick enough to close down Atletico, who were repeatedly afforded opportunities to deliver balls in the box, where Madrid’s defenders looked equally ill-equipped to deal with the aerial threat of Sorloth, or the quick feet of Alvarez. Alonso called it “positive damage,” an opportunity to learn, grow and improve. But it’s damage, nonetheless.
“There are tough days, that’s sport, that’s football,” Alonso said Saturday. “What’s important is how we react.”
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