Manchester City delivered a stunning Champions League comeback at the Santiago Bernabéu, recovering from an early deficit to defeat Real Madrid 2-1 and intensify pressure on manager Xabi Alonso’s increasingly precarious position.
Real Madrid opened the scoring through Rodrygo, who collected Jude Bellingham’s cross-field pass and fired home his first goal since January to give the hosts an early advantage.
Nico O’Reilly responded just seven minutes later with a dream equalizer, poking home from close range after Josko Gvardiol’s header was parried back into danger by goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.
Erling Haaland completed City’s turnaround on the stroke of half-time by confidently converting a penalty after Antonio Rudiger bundled the striker over in the box, extending his Champions League goal tally to 55 since his debut.
The Bernabéu crowd made their feelings known toward Pep Guardiola before kick-off by jeering the former Barcelona boss when his name was announced, but City’s measured response silenced the hostile atmosphere and secured revenge for their February play-off stage defeat.
Real Madrid created several opportunities to equalize in the second half through Jude Bellingham’s chip and substitute Endrick’s header that clipped the crossbar, but City’s resolute defending proved sufficient to hold on for a crucial victory.
Kylian Mbappe, Real Madrid’s leading goalscorer, remained unused on the bench after being deemed unfit ahead of the match, highlighting the injury concerns plaguing the Spanish giants during this difficult period.
O’Reilly’s Player of the Match performance showcased the academy left-back’s composure and defensive contribution, winning three tackles and providing four important clearances throughout the contest.
Alonso’s position now hangs by a thread following the defeat, coming just days after a board meeting that followed Sunday’s loss to Celta Vigo, with speculation mounting that another managerial change could be imminent.
City’s victory propels them to fourth in the Champions League table and positions them confidently toward securing a top-eight finish with upcoming fixtures against Bodo/Glimt and Galatasaray offering further opportunities.
This was the first managerial meeting between Alonso and Guardiola since their Bayern Munich days as player and boss, a result that could prove consequential for the Real Madrid manager’s future at the club.
