Loses 7-6 on aggregate in Champions League Semifinal to Inter Milan
Beats Real Madrid 4-3 in the last El Clasico of La Liga.
The Champions League Leg
Socrates, Brazil’s soccer and philosopher once said about his country’s style: “Beauty comes first, Victory is secondary. What matters is joy.” Those legendary and eloquent words best describe what transpired in the two legs of Inter’s win over Barcelona in the Champions League semifinal.
Socrates’ philosophy was expressed by Inter’s coach Simone Inzaghi in another way:“I am extremely proud of the performance my squad has put in, because tonight we faced one of the most offensive and beautiful teams in the world.”
From whatever perspective you viewed this game, as either a fan of the defeated Barcelona team espousing Socrates, or as a fan of the victorious Inter Milan side who must have held their breath the entire time and come away delighted at a victory that they probably shouldn’t have attained, one thing is abundantly clear: these two legs will go down as one of the best and most entertaining in Champions League history. The two matches were not only dramatic to witness, they were also beautiful to watch.
The sheer number of goals, lead changes (and their accompanying momentum swings and dramatic turns) evinced a drama that is not often seen at the latter stages of Champions League competition, when more defensive strategies tend to rule the day. Because teams are so averse to losing, they tend to not take unnecessary risks, especially late in games that are tied, favoring advancement over anything else. Flick’s teams do not play that way. They do not betray their style; they double down on it. Because they do not ever betray their style, their defensive high-line persists, and they tend to also give up a lot of goals. Simply put, Flick’s mantra is we will outscore you.
While this strategy has worked for Barca all season long, in the Champions League return leg, Inter were up to the task. In a see-saw battle (Inter were up 2-0, Barca stormed back to lead 3-2, Inter upped Barcelona with 2 unanswered goals for the final 4-3), Barcelona were not content with managing their 3-2 advantaged and instead continued to insist on a 4th instead of just defending, and in the depths of injury time, were stunned by an improbable and unbelievably highly skilled goal from Inter’s center back. The Milan defender, Francisco Acerbi had scored all of 2 goals in 37 appearances in the Champions League, but in the 93rd minute his sublime redirection of fast moving cross into the box (with his wrong foot no less) just eluded Czesny left hand for the 3-3 equalizer that would send the game into extra time. Drama this good can only be conceived in the writing room. The surreal goal gave Inter the momentum and they didn’t relinquish it. In extra time, Inter scored a very Barca like goal, pinging the ball inside of the penalty box with stunning precision before one of their substitutes, Davide Frattesi received the ball and waited a slight moment before firing the ball past the Barcelona goalie. The irony of that goal must have been too much on the Barca players. While they continued to look for the tying goal that would take them to penalty kicks, one couldn’t help but observe how tired, both physically and emotionally, the Barcelona players were at that point.
Inter had somehow flipped the script on Barcelona and that led them to the Champions League final against PSG, a team, curiously enough, that plays a style very similar to Barcelona.
Barcelona triumphs 3-2 in extra time of Copa del Rey Final
It doesn’t matter what year it is played, how each team is faring or the makeup of the rosters of each team. Because of its nature and position as the greatest darby in the Spanish league, if not one of the best rivalries in world club football, El Clasico always produces a great viewing spectacle. The players understand that this is one of the most important games they will play in a given year, and the only other more important ones are games against the same rival that may occur in other competitions, whether that is La Copa, or La Liga, or Champions League.
The best illustration of this occurred in 2011, when In a single 18-day period, Real Madrid and Barcelona played four El Clásico matchups. These included one La Liga game, a Copa del Rey final, and two legs of the Champions League semi-finals. This was considered a unique and intense period in the rivalry’s history.
Watching Barcelona play Real Madrid not only produces great drama on the pitch, but what it always reveals, without failure, is the distinct philosophies of the two great Spanish clubs: Barca’s legendary possession football coupled with a enhanced version of line breaking passes (Flick’s tweak) versus Real Madrid’s stout defense, lightning fast counter-attacks, and mastery in set pieces. Barcelona’s commitment to its philosophy of creating great players that learn its style to Real’s philosophy of buying the best and integrating them into a whole. The clash of styles is as classic as the rivalry itself; it’s what gives the rivalry its special meaning.
Of course, as this year has now proven, when Barcelona is loaded with generational talent, no other team in the world can match the style that they invented and continue to perfect. (Consider that if Barcelona played Man City, the team that most recently is the best imitator of the Barcelona school, mostly because its coach Pep Guardiola was reared in it, I would fully expect Barca to have an edge in possession, albeit a small one.) And when they are on top of their game, Barcelona is a difficult club to beat.
Barcelona’s record against their rivals this year may be unparalleled in history. In an early meeting in October 2024, Barcelona ripped the Merengues 4-0 at the Bernabeu, a win which had followed a similar demolition of Bayern Munich (4-1) in a Champions League game just days before. In January, in Jeddah Saudi Arabia, Mbappe got Real Madrid off to a fast start but in the end it was another resounding win (5-2) for the Barcelona squad. When I first started watching soccer, when I lived in Spain in 1974, Barcelona, led by Johan Cruyff, crushed Real Madrid 5-0 in the Spanish capital. (That game and season marked the start of the modern day Barcelona team that we know today.) But more than one lopsided victories between the two titans in a single season are rare.
Early on in this encounter it was obvious that the aforementioned patterns would prevail. Barcelona would have the ball and Real would sit back in their defensive block and counter with lightning speed. That’s been the time tested strategy against Barcelona, mostly because teams don’t really have any other choice. As good as Real look against other teams, in the sense that they can outpossess other teams and force them to counter, they can never seem to do this against teams that practice the Barcelona style, whether that is the Blaugrana itself, or other incarnations of that style such as Man City or even Arsenal (the team that just recently vanquished them in Champions League).
This game was intense from the beginning with Barca getting the lead 1-0 before Real scored two unanswered, and then Barca scoring the last 2 to finally win it. Three lead changes with a final goal in overtime was as much as any fan could ask for.
In the first half it was all Barcelona possession and Courtois making big saves, one of his finest on a header from Kounde. But in the 27th minute, Yamal proved why he’s the most lethal player in world football. Even with three men guarding him on the right side of the box, he still crossed it to Pedri just outside of the box, and the passing genius showed off his finishing touch with a shot that no goalie in the world was going to stop, not even Courtois.
Real’s best moments, and a sign of things to come, came in the 40th minute when Bellingham scored but it was annulled because he was offside. In the dying moments, Vini finally having found his groove, charged in on goal with speed before being fouled. The referee initially signalled a PK but it wa subsequently overruled by an offside.
In the second half, Vini had two shots early on forcing Szczęsny into his first two saves. Mbappe’s introduction into the second half levelled this match as Real created 5 chances in 10 minutes. On one of those Mbappe dribbled three Barca players and was fouled by DeJong, who grabbed his arm to gain a tactical foul rather than letting the Frenchman blow past the Barca defesne. Mbappe finished this off with a low hard free kick that bounced off the left post for the equalizing goal.
In the 74th minute, the perfect illustration of the stylistic differences materialized. As Barca pinged the ball from side to side looking for the perfect chance, Madrid stole the ball and mounted a 70m counter attack with Vini generating another scoring chance. While that didn’t go in, Tchouameni scored on the subsequent header from a perfect Guler corner at 77’. It was the 6th corner of the half for Real Madrid.
In the 83rd minute, Ferran latched on to a perfectly weighted ball from Yamal (the kid also has prodigious passing talent) enabled him to beat both Ruddiger and Courtois to level the score, and to send the game into overtime.
A perfect example of Barca’s more advanced passing occurred in the second half when they made two perfect 30-40 m passes to Raphinha that broke Real’s defense apart. Raphina put both balls wide (it wasn’t his best game) but the constant pressure exerted on Madrid paid off at the end.
With the score tied at 2-2 in extra time and PK’s looming, It was an uncharacteristic mistake from Luka Modric that gave Kounde his chance to shine. A clearing pass from deep in defense right into the middle of the field was intercepted by Kounde, who dribbled it once before striking the ball perfectly with a low hard shot to Courtois’ right and into the corner of the net. Even the best eventually succumb to the suffocating Barcelona press.
Although Barca always produce a great stream of talent, Barcelona’s current homebrewed stars Yamal, Pedri, Gavi, Cubarsi along with imports Raphina, Lewandoski, DeJong (from Ajax which is a similar academy system to Barcelona due mostly to Cruyff’s work in building both) and Ferran constitute a side that may match the great Barcelona teams of 2008-2011.
Starting off Barcelona’s most talented youngster in a generation, Lamine Yamal, who at only 17, looks like the second coming of Messi. A player able to break down opposing defenders at will with incredible footwork, speed, and a finishing touch that gets more polished with every minute he plays. Lamine himself may not like the comparisons, but they are now not only becoming irresistible but also more plausible. Pedri is like a hybrid of Iniesta, Xavi and Busquets, a player with the uncanny ability, characteristic of all the Masia academy players, to slow the game down, yet explosive enough to dribble past defenders and then deliver the most perfectly weighted passes into space. What made Pedri especially good this year was the number of defensive line breaking passes he made to lead La Liga. (But Pedri is not alone in midfield. Both Casado and DeJong also are great at line breaking passes. The Barca trio is in the top 4 of most line breaking passes in La Liga, with the bulk of their breaks in the second line category.) All of this rich midfield play has enabled Barca’s wingers Raphinha and especially Yamal to be on the receiving end of these perfect spot passes. Ferran and Lewandoski are perfect 9’s, which are very suited to playing Hanzi Flick’s more direct style (i.e. longer and more line breaking passes) than Barcelona has played before since it gives them better finishing opportunities.
With one trophy down, Barcelona are now looking for the treble. La Liga title is within reach as is the Champions League title. With the team that Barcelona has and the way they have been wielding their style upon their opponents, anything is possible.
Arsenal defeats Real Madrid 3-0 in the first leg of Champions quarterfinals.
Return Leg
Let’s start by making a bold prediction. Real Madrid, down by 3 goals to a very good Arsenal team, a team that is second in the world’s toughest league, a team led by Spaniard Mikel Arteta, a team that plays an elegant style of football reminiscent of the Barcelona glory teams from 2008-2011, will make an astonishing comeback and defeat the Gunners before it is all said and done and advance to the semi-finals.
This prediction is based on both qualitative and quantitative analysis. The quantitative part of the equation is based on the fact that Real Madrid have won this competition 15 times and Arsenal have never won, and also because Real has proven itself, over the last decade, to be a Premier League vanquisher (Liverpool twice, Man City twice). Real Madrid have played in 502 UCL games and won 302 with 85 draws and 112 losses, so they only lose 22% of the time. I was unable to find statistics for how many home games Real has lost in this competition but extrapolating from the numbers above, it would seem fair to say that Real has probably only lost at home 50 times in 55 years of competition, or only about 1 a year. So their chances of winning at home are very high again.
The qualitative side is simple. It is not based on any tactical analysis and is simply a gut feel. It is based on the fact that Real Madrid are the best team in the history of club soccer, the most successful in this particular competition, and also because the return leg is in their home stadium, a place where they rarely lose in Champions League (see above). Real vanquished Liverpool in a somewhat similar manner in 2023 when it scored 5 straight goals after the Reds took a 2-0 nil lead in the first 15 minutes in the first leg at Anfield. Although the circumstances are somewhat different here, these Madrid players know what they are capable of simply because they have done it recently before (see video highlights at bottom).
This squad, after having been embarrassed in London, will be more than ready in the return leg. Winning championships is in the DNA of this team; their success in this tournament is simply unsurpassed. When a player signs on to play for the Merengues, they know the history, they know the height of expectations and responsibility placed on them, and most often than not, the players rise to the challenge, no matter the obstacle. The fans, accustomed to Real’s winning pedigree, always create an extremely hostile environment to away teams. The atmosphere next Tuesday at the Bernabeu should be as electric as ever given the obstacle the Merengues are facing. By the time Real get that first goal, it will be increasingly difficult for them to withstand the tsunami that is about to hit them. The first 15 minutes will be key. We will find out very soon how good the Gunners game travels.
First Leg
Arsenal truly dominated this game, creating numerous chances and forcing numerous saves from Courtois to keep the game scoreless in the first half. Arsenal had 69% possession in the first 15 minutes of the game.
The second half explosion was triggered by Declan Rice, a solid midfield player who had never scored a goal from a free kick, yet managed to score two in a 15 minute span and made history as the first player to score two set pieces in a single Champions League game. (One has to wonder why a player who never has scored off a free kick got the chance to do it not only once but twice. Arteta must have seen or sensed something during the practice sessions). It is important to note that, on the first kick, Courtois made the mistake of only placing 4 players on the wall and Rice was able to curve the ball around the limited wall, the ball bending viciously and seeming to accelerate around the last man as if it were a rocket gaining speed from the gravitational pull of a planet. The second kick was your classic upper corner “postage stamp” goal and was simply unstoppable. My favorite goal was actually Mikel Merino’s sublime finish on a pullback cross from Leandro Trossard. The technical level of that goal was simply amazing. The pace and placement of the ball was of the highest level. Most often than not, those shots go either wide (skewed by too much placement) or high (too much power).
Mike Arteta described this game as “the biggest of his managerial career” and his team delivered. But that’s the beauty of the Champions League format. One game isn’t enough to finish the job. You have to perform at your highest level in two games against the best clubs in the world. The second leg will now surely surmount the first as the most important. If Arsenal can win at Madrid, they will truly have earned it.
Manchester City against Real Madrid has now become, in the infamous words of ESPN, an “instant classic”, or for those more familiar with the English terminology, a Champions League “darby” of sorts. These two teams have squared off the past 3 years in the Champions League in two-legged affairs. The budding rivalry has been elevated to the highest level because not only are these two teams amongst the top clubs in the world, but because the games that they have played have themselves been of the best technical quality, highly entertaining, and quite dramatic. But what has become the most fascinating facet has been the clash of two radically different football philosophies.
Pep Guardiola’s City is the third-generation or version of the style first introduced in Guardiola’s early years at Barcelona, a team that played a style commonly known then and now as tiki-taka (The Spanish team of the 2008-2012 era, which was heavily populated with Barca players, also was renowned and credited with playing that but the style was nascent in the Cruyff Barcelona Academy system). Guardiola then took that system to Bayern Munich in the early 2010’s and finally to City starting in 2016. Guardiola is known to have distilled tiki-taka into its simplest formula:
“In the world of football, there is only one secret: I’ve got the ball or I haven’t.”
Guardiola’s teams throughout the years have perfected the left-hand part of the equation in his succinct statement to the point that each team, each generation, is substantially better at the art of possession football than its predecessor. They have the ball the most of any team in the modern era and they are able to do that against any team, from the bottom feeders of the EPL to the very best teams of all of Europe. One of the key factors in this strategy is the ability to win the ball back quickly once possession is lost. This has the effect of not only demoralizing the opposition but more importantly, inducing huge levels of physical and mental fatigue as it forces them to play defense not only for a majority of the game but also for long stretches of time (i.e. minutes) during the game. Guardiola’s teams vaunted high press defensive techniques are just as important of an ingredient to the success of the style, albeit not as aesthetically pleasing, and hence not as glorified.
So what to do if you’re up against a team of City’s caliber ? They are going to have the ball the majority of the time so your only option is to low-press, which is colloquially known as “parking the bus.” It is not a tactic that teams wish to employ (well unless you’re Italian and love catenaccio). It is a tactic that is forced upon them by the quality of the opposition. City imposes its will on you to the point that this becomes your only resource.
But as with any tactic there is a counter tactic. City’s ever increasing dominance of possession over the years has forced teams to retrench farther and farther back into their own goal, thus shrinking the available field of play. Teams used to play defense in their own half, a distant luxury as City presses further and further upfield with their vaunted possession; nowadays it is common for defenses to pack inside of a 30 to 35 yard box from their own goal-line. This counter tactic has now forced City to try to create offense in ever shrinking real estate than ever before. The other aspects of tiki-taka, the false 9 and positional play, tend to have diminishing results as the space in which you are forced to operate is reduced. When playing teams of substantially lesser abilities, which really, in this context, means a less cohesive defensive shape and the ability of its players to adhere to it, City is able to eventually break teams down and win at a high percentage.
Real’s counter was to exploit the high-press with lightning quick counter-attacks with passes over the high-press into space where one of their two speedy and highly-skilled front-runners, Vinny or Rodrygo could run onto the ball and hold it long enough while being defended by more than one player, and then find an open teammate deep in City territory to create opportunities.
Both goals were perfect examples of each team’s brilliantly planned tactics. Real, knowing that they had to score on City’s ground, got their goal early (12’). Carvajal’s long high pass went to Jude Bellingham, who controlled it deftly deep into City territory and away from the press. Bellingham initiated a passing sequence that went through Valverde, then Vinnie, before the latter’s cross found Rodrygo open in the middle, who scored on a second bite of the cherry after Ederson saved his initial shot. After that it was all City the rest of the game. City generated shot after shot (33 total), corner after corner (18 total), before Kevin DeBruyne (76’) got a hold of a weak clearance from Ruddiger, took a little subtle touch (no panic on his part) before roofing into the net.
The game, thus, had gone according to the master plan. City attacked constantly, and Madrid generated enough counters to keep the encounter honest. After DeBruyne’s goal, it seemed like Real would crack, until they didn’t. DeBruyne missed a second clear opportunity minutes after his goal that would have sealed the deal but he put it just high. Madrid survived the onslaught (48 defensive clearances !) not only during regulation but also for the extra time. Their goal, to get the game to the penalties, had been achieved.
In the six games that these two teams played over the past 3 years, Real was the perfect foil to City style. City would get goals but not in the numbers required to win outright. (The only exception to that was in the second leg at the semi-final stage in 2023 when City thumped Real by a 4-0 scoreline that was as dominant a performance that one elite team has put on another in recent memory.) In this last game, City couldn’t win in regulation and was forced to try its luck in the penalty kicks.
City’s two misses in the penalty shootout was its undoing. Madrid’s Modric was the only Merengue to miss. That slimmest of margins was the difference.
Was City the best team ? Undoubtedly. The data doesn’t lie. But Real did just enough to move on yet again. This is the sixth time that Madrid has eliminated City, twice as much as any other team.
I’m sure another chapter of this instant classic rivalry will play out again next year.
Penalty Kicks:
To the soccer aesthete, the difference between City and Real (or is it City versus any opponent ?) is a matter of style. On the one hand is possession football at its finest: the ability of a team to hold on to the ball for extended possession in compressed space, string together tens of passes per offensive possession, swing the ball around the perimeter of the defense at will, create overloads and mismatches, generate shots and corner kicks ? Or, on the other hand, is counter-attacking football more to your taste: the ability of a team to defend fiercely and then when given the chance to strike back quickly, effectively, and efficiently (i.e. create scoring chances or score outright). It is a matter of do you enjoy a team’s ability to compress footballing space, or do you enjoy a team’s ability to explode into vacant space. I personally am awestruck by the former, but enjoy and celebrate the latter.
What is going with Halland on this team ? I’ve alluded to this before, but after this game I feel even more assured that The Terminator is a misfit for this style. Before City, Halland was well known for his explosions into enemy territory, using his amazing pace and power to beat opponents and score amazing goals. In this scheme, he hardly touches the ball. He seems relegated to trying to score with his head (he did hit the crossbar once today) or cleaning up on rebounds. On a team of creators, he is the least creative of forces. If you click on the Passes Tab in the “theanalyst.com” site below, you’ll see Halland (#9) on a bubble by himself, disconnected from the rest of the team, all of whose players are connected by a full mesh of passing links.
The answer I think, in the context of what was previously stated, is that Halland is a better player when he’s exploding into empty spaces, where he can use his amazing pace and finishing ability, rather than operating in compressed spaces, where defenders are more efficient against him by being able to be more physical and better able to defend his limited dribbling ability. Hence, he’s limited to headers and cleaning up rebounds and deflections.