logo
Real Madrid's last-gasp winner against Mallorca delays Barcelona title party

Real Madrid's last-gasp winner against Mallorca delays Barcelona title party

The Guardian14-05-2025

This may have done no more than delay the inevitable and no one truly believes in a miracle, but suddenly there was a roar, a release, some life at the Santiago Bernabéu. The day before, Carlo Ancelotti had talked about the many a wonderful comebacks over his years at Real Madrid, moments he said would never be forgotten, and now here in his penultimate game in this stadium was another, 20-year-old centre-back Jacobo Ramón scoring with the last kick of the game to defeat Real Mallorca and keep the league title alive for another day at least.
It came late, very late on a grey, wet Wednesday night in front of perhaps 30,000 empty seats. It came with a manager whose departure was announced two days earlier and a dozen players missing, at the end of an evening that had felt empty for a long time. And ultimately it probably doesn't mean much to Madrid. But it meant the world to Ramón and for a moment everyone could forget how this season has gone, the defender's strike in the 95th minute overturning Martin Valjent's opener after just 11 minutes.
That leaves Madrid four points behind Barcelona, with two games to play and Barça with three. It also, in truth, leaves Madrid where they were, just waiting for the end. If Barcelona win against Espanyol on Thursday night that will come within 24 little hours. The statements will follow immediately: Madrid will at last officially announce what the Brazilian Football Confederation already has – that Ancelotti is the leaving for the only job in world football bigger, as coach of the Seleção. Then they will confirm another open secret: that Xabi Alonso is his replacement. And then attention will turn elsewhere, or it would do if it hadn't already.
The league may be mathematically alive, but it was effectively concluded when Barcelona won the clásico on Sunday. That made this a strange occasion; for much of the night, it had felt like what it was: a game too far, hearts no longer in it. In the end though there was at least rebellion, pride, Madrid racking up more than 30 shots, and a final explosion.
There were still tickets on sale at kick-off, for the first time all season, hope abandoned. From some of those that came there were whistles when the teams were read out. They were timid, no full-scale protest. And not everyone was there. Dani Carvajal, Éder Militão and David Alaba have missed much of the season. Antonio Rüdiger, suspended after throwing ice at the referee in the dying seconds of their Copa del Rey final defeat by Barcelona, had surgery. Eduardo Camavinga had torn a muscle three days earlier. And then came what you could be forgiven for thinking was a serious outbreak of season's-over-itis.
Lucas Vázquez and Vinícius Júnior were injured in the clásico. Rodrygo, who didn't play a minute, walked out for training on Tuesday morning and then walked back in again. On the morning of this game, Andriy Lunin pulled out. In the afternoon, so too did Brahim Díaz. Aurélien Tchouaméni was suspended. Madrid were left with 10 first-team players, and one of those is the strange case of Jesús Vallejo, the footballer who has been on the bench for 43 games and on the pitch for one, disastrous, 10-minute cameo. Here, he got on again and even provided the assist at death.
No one could ever have imagined that, although the night could have started well when Arda Guler sent Endrick running right through the middle after just two minutes. He reached the edge of the area but, falling as he struck the ball having been given a slight push in the back by José Copete, the shot was saved by Leo Román. That was to be a recurring theme, once Mallorca took the lead. Dani Ceballos was unable to cut out a pass from Mateu Morey on the right and Valjent swung his left foot to send the ball past Thibaut Courtois.
Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan Wilson
Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer
after newsletter promotion
Madrid's reaction was timid at first and although it did gather pace, the shot count rising and Román providing to be a formidable barrier. He made saves from Jude Bellingham, Luka Modric, Kylian Mbappé and Fede Valverde in the first half and carried on the same way in the second, resisting until there was only quarter of an hour left. Then Mbappé found a way through Morey and Valjent with a combination of elegance and strength, then hit a superb near-post finish to put Madrid level.
The French forward had underlined once again one of the great contradictions of this campaign: this was his 28th league goal, his 40th in all competitions yet few would call it an unqualified success. He had at least given them a glimpse of hope on the night, the chances increasing, the saves too. Madrid kept coming, an occasion made of this. Román kept saving, Valjent cleared one off the line, Gonzalo García missed a clear chance at the far post and then there was Ramón to complete one last remontada for old times' sake.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘I didn't like the attitude': Thomas Tuchel tears into lacklustre England
‘I didn't like the attitude': Thomas Tuchel tears into lacklustre England

The Guardian

time29 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘I didn't like the attitude': Thomas Tuchel tears into lacklustre England

Thomas Tuchel admitted England had 'played with fire' in their 1-0 win over Andorra, risking the concession of an equaliser and a draw that would have registered as perhaps their greatest humiliation since defeat to the USA in 1950. 'I felt it was like a Cup game where the favourites don't see the danger,' he said. England won thanks to Harry Kane's 50th-minute goal, leaving them top of the group on nine points without having conceded a goal. No previous England manager has ever begun with three successive victories to nil, but Tuchel was clearly very unhappy with the performance. 'I didn't like the attitude how we ended the game,' he said. 'I liked the attitude how we started the game. But I didn't like the last half hour. I think we lacked urgency and seriousness you need in a World Cup qualifier. I didn't like the body language and it was not what the occasion needed.' What made it all the more frustrating was that there had been no indication of that flatness in the days leading up to the game during warm-weather training in Spain. 'They were enthusiastic and they showed that as a group when they were in the camp. When we started the game, the attitude was right. We wanted to play according to our principals and to the plan. 'Matches like this can become awkward when you don't score. It can be stuck. Then it's necessary to not get frustrated, to do the little things right. I had the feeling after 25 minutes we were a bit frustrated with the little things and everybody tried different things. Then it becomes freestyle and it gets slower. Everyone wanted the ball in to feet, and nobody was speeding the game up with runs. You need contra-movements and runs and if you don't invest it becomes a stuck game.' Tuchel acknowledged that fatigue at the end of the season might have been a factor, but was determined not to offer that as an excuse. 'The window is the window so no excuses. I think the clubs don't like the window and for the national team also it's not easy because the players are coming from a long season. We can and have to do better for the 90 minutes. We created an xG of 3 and underperformed with one goal. Normally in games like this you overperform the xG because of greater individual quality. But we didn't. We lacked the energy. It's the most honest thing to admit it and not talk around it.' On a night of very few positives, the brightest element was probably the performance of Noni Madueke, who set up Kane's goal and whose runs behind his full-back did stretch Andorra. 'He was a constant threat today and he got the assist as well,' said Kane. 'We need more of that – we've got amazing players and you need one v one quality in these games.' Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Tuchel had no problem with the boos at half-time and full-time, saying he understood why fans were unhappy. 'The support was amazing,' he said. 'They created a fantastic atmosphere for a match like this. They were underwhelmed and not happy with our performance. I don't think we can blame them for that.' He said he was unaware of the offensive chanting about Keir Starmer. 'If it happens,' he said, 'it is not acceptable, but I didn't hear it.' Fundamentally, though, this was a night of frustration. 'It's very hot here, dry pitch, probably similar conditions to next year at the World Cup,' said Kane. 'We probably weren't good enough on the ball – we kept giving it away, which gave them confidence and energy. It is what it is.'

Luke Littler dumped out of Nordic Masters in quarter-finals after surprise loss to stablemate Nathan Aspinall
Luke Littler dumped out of Nordic Masters in quarter-finals after surprise loss to stablemate Nathan Aspinall

The Sun

time34 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Luke Littler dumped out of Nordic Masters in quarter-finals after surprise loss to stablemate Nathan Aspinall

LUKE LITTLER was dumped out of the Nordic Darts Masters by Nathan Aspinall. The reigning world champion headed to Copenhagen as the pre-tournament favourite. 2 2 But he suffered a shock 6-3 defeat by his stablemate in the quarter-finals. This was Littler's first match against a top player since losing to Luke Humphries in the Premier League final last month. And The Nuke was unable to become a Great Dane this weekend in Denmark. Aspinall, 33, roared in delight when he took out double 16. And he gave it back to those in the crowd who had booed him on the oche. For the Stockpot thrower, who is ranked sixth in the world, it was only his SECOND win over the teen sensation in a professional capacity in 16 meetings. It is the first success over the sport's biggest name since a Prem night in Nottingham in March 2024. World No2 Littler won the overall World Series of Darts crown last year in Amsterdam. Yet this loss is not exactly ideal preparation for his debut appearance at the PDC World Cup of Darts in England colours. Littler will team up with Humphries later this week. Darts host forced to apologise after Nathan Aspinall's X-rated interview with Asp left covering his face in horror The World Cup takes place at Frankfurt's Eissporthalle, with defending champions England given a bye to the second round. Humphries teamed up with Michael Smith to lift the trophy in 2024.

Gauff moves fast to ease Spike Lee's NBA pain
Gauff moves fast to ease Spike Lee's NBA pain

Reuters

time37 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Gauff moves fast to ease Spike Lee's NBA pain

PARIS, June 7 (Reuters) - When Coco Gauff saw that Spike Lee was attending her French Open final against Aryna Sabalenka, she felt she could cheer up the American film director after the recent NBA heartbreak suffered by his beloved New York Knicks. Gauff upset world number one Sabalenka 6-7(5) 6-2 6-4 on Saturday to win her second Grand Slam singles title. "It was honestly the first time I really met him up close," Gauff told a press conference. Having spotted Lee watching her in previous matches, including at the U.S. Open, Gauff was thrilled to see him courtside again during the warm-up against Sabalenka. "I was like, 'Oh my gosh, Spike Lee is there'," she said. "I thought, if I win this match, the first person I'm going to see is Spike Lee." And she did, making a beeline for Lee to share a joyful celebration despite the Knicks' painful loss in the NBA's Eastern Conference finals last week. "I wanted to tell him that even though the Knicks didn't win, I gave him something to cheer for," Gauff said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store