Manchester City come from behind to topple Real Madrid in Champions League

Erling Haaland of Manchester City (C) celebrates his goal with his teammates
Erling Haaland of Manchester City (C) celebrates his goal with his teammatesAlberto Gardin / Zuma Press / Profimedia

Manchester City heaped more misery on under-fire Real Madrid manager Xabi Alonso by overturning a one-goal deficit to win 2-1 in the UEFA Champions League (UCL), marking just their second-ever victory at the Santiago Bernabéu.

Key stats

- Manchester City have beaten Real Madrid for the first time in the UEFA Champions League since May 17th, 2023, a run of four games without a win.

- This was only the second time in Real Madrid's history that they have scored first but gone in behind at half-time of a European Cup/Champions League game, after March 1991 versus Spartak Moscow.

- Real Madrid have lost after scoring the opening goal in the UEFA Champions League for the first time since February 26th, 2020 against Manchester City (37 games without defeat).

Highlights

Analysis

Nico O'Reilly heat map
Nico O'Reilly heat mapThomas COEX / AFP / Opta by Stats Perform

Manchester City's Nico O'Reilly put in a player of the match performance, earning an 8.2 Flashscore rating, scoring a goal and completing 91 per cent of his passes (32/25).

Momentum
MomentumOpta by Stats Perform

Manchester City were rarely under any significant pressure from Real Madrid.

Match report

This clash topped the UCL billing for matchday six, and the game lived up to its expectations inside the opening five minutes.

Vinícius Júnior hit the deck inside the area under a challenge from Matheus Nunes, and while referee Clément Turpin originally pointed to the spot, VAR confirmed that the challenge was, in fact, outside of the area.

Federico Valverde’s effort from the resulting free-kick deflected inches wide of the post, before Vini Jr. dinked an effort just over the bar as Madrid looked to capitalise on a slow City start.

The visitors hadn’t had a single attempt in the opening half-hour, and they were eventually punished inside that period.

A swift Real counterattack ended with Rodrygo in the inside right channel, and the Brazilian made no mistake in arrowing an effort into the far corner to end a whopping 32-game goal drought.

However, with their first meaningful chance of the game, City hit back when Joško Gvardiol climbed highest to get the initial contact on Rayan Cherki’s corner, allowing Nico O’Reilly to prod home the rebound from inside the six-yard box.

The game was flipped on its head just moments later when a moment of madness from Antonio Rüdiger saw him drag Erling Haaland to the ground inside the area.

Despite originally being missed on-field, a swift check of the pitchside monitor resulted in a penalty being awarded, and it was no surprise to see Haaland dispatch from the spot.

After the restart, Jude Bellingham spurned a glorious chance to get Madrid back on level terms when he dinked over the crossbar as he angled in on goal.

Xabi Alonso turned to his bench in an attempt to change the flow of the game, but his changes didn’t particularly have the desired effect.

It was one of their starters who missed two glorious chances to draw level, with Vini Jr first missing a free header six yards from goal, before he then volleyed over at the far post after he was once again left unmarked by the City defence.

Endrick was Alonso’s last throw of the dice, and he came within a lick of paint of bailing his manager out when his header crashed back off the crossbar.

Match stats
Match statsOpta by Stats Perform

City endured sustained pressure in the closing stages, but they defended admirably to see out a significant victory in their quest to secure automatic qualification to the last 16.

A chorus of whistles and jeers greeted the final whistle in Madrid, as Alonso’s position comes under even greater scrutiny after slumping to back-to-back home defeats. 

Flashscore Man of the Match: Nico O’Reilly (Manchester City)

Post-match comments

Erling Haaland speaking to TNT Sports:

"It's difficult to come here, and the game has loads of transitions. We could have had another goal. I was close on one in the second half, Jeremy Doku was close a few times, but the game was a bit chaotic. We can't really control it, which is difficult and it's difficult to come here, so in the end, we're super happy.

"It could have looked completely different today if we didn't win because we lost against Leverkusen, so this win is really important.

"Now we've got two more games left, so we need to finish strong now, and hopefully we can be in the first eight because then we're through."

Pep Guardiola to TNT Sports:

"It could be better, but of course it's always so difficult.

"Four, five, six players played their first game here, so we are not completely ready. It's a process, with lots of new players. But winning here, we have to be happy, especially in terms of points.

"It's in our hands to finish in the top eight; that is our target."

Jude Bellingham to TNT Sports:

"We're still trying to work it out within the changing room, regardless of what goes on outside. We know that's not helpful. One thing is how we're managing games. Certain points where we have to suffer it feels like we always concede and it puts us on the back foot and makes us have to play a way we don't want to.

"But in the changing room we have what we need to turn it around, we need maybe a bit of luck or maybe something we need to discuss internally. I have faith this season isn't over just because we're in a bad run of form.

"The manager has been great. I personally have a great relationship with him, and I know a lot of the boys do too. After that run of draws, we had some great conversations internally and felt we'd put that form behind us, but the last couple of games. No one is downing tools, no one complaining or moaning."

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