Champions League: Madrid fall to Man City as sack pressure mounts on Xabi Alonso

Manchester City delivered a disciplined, high-quality performance to defeat Real Madrid 2-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu, completing a statement Champions League win that showcased both resilience and tactical maturity.
Pep Guardiola’s side recovered from an early setback, took control before half-time, and then defended with composure to secure only their second-ever victory at the iconic venue.
After a finely poised opening spell in which City dominated possession and Madrid threatened intermittently on the break, the first half exploded into life in its closing stages. Despite seeing far less of the ball, Madrid struck first.
A swift, incisive counter-attack carved City open, allowing Rodrygo to coolly fire beyond Donnarumma just before the half-hour mark, ending both his own scoring drought and the deadlock.
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The opener jolted City into action. Their equaliser came from a set-piece, with Courtois spilling a routine ball into the path of O’Reilly, who reacted sharply to sweep home his first-ever Champions League goal.
The momentum had swung, and City capitalised decisively. Minutes before the break, Erling Haaland outmanoeuvred Antonio Rüdiger in the box, drawing a penalty which he calmly converted to complete the first-half turnaround.
City’s expected goals stood at 0.89 by the interval compared to Madrid’s modest 0.24, underlining their offensive efficiency.
Courtois was called into action repeatedly, making two superb saves to prevent further damage as City pressed aggressively.
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The second half unfolded with Madrid searching for a route back but struggling to break down City’s disciplined defensive structure.
Substitute Endrick came closest, clipping the crossbar with a sharp effort, while Vinícius Júnior squandered several half-chances. City, meanwhile, maintained control through structured pressing and intelligent game management.
Guardiola’s men finished with an impressive 2.54 xG, an exceptional tally for an away side at the Bernabéu compared to Madrid’s final output of 1.44. The statistical profile reflected the match itself: Madrid dangerous in flashes, but City far more coherent, clinical, and competitive across the ninety minutes.
The victory lifts Manchester City above Real Madrid in the Champions League league-phase standings, moving the English champions to 13 points ahead of Madrid’s 12. With two rounds remaining, both sides remain well placed within the top eight, but the night undoubtedly belonged to City.
A night marked by intensity, quality, and the familiar drama that accompanies these European heavyweights—and once again, Manchester City leave Madrid with the upper hand.


