Gabriele Marcotti, Senior Writer, ESPN FCJan 13, 2025, 10:45 AM ET
What a weekend! European soccer didn’t disappoint, per usual, with a ton of talking points to discuss after a captivating slate of games. Barcelona thumped Clasico rivals Real Madrid to win the Spanish Supercopa, but more than the result, it showed how Hansi Flick’s side can bridge the gap in LaLiga while Carlo Ancelotti must fix his star-studded team. In the English FA Cup, Man United advanced over Arsenal on penalties to reach the fourth round, but both teams got what they needed from Sunday’s fiery, full-blooded clash.
Let’s get to it. Here are musings and reactions to the most memorable moments of the weekend.
Clasico beatdown must have consequences, more for Real Madrid than for Barcelona
Maybe there’s a parallel universe where Rodrygo‘s shot caroms in off the woodwork early in the second half, Barca don’t go up the pitch to score directly afterwards, Wojciech Szczesny still gets sent off, Madrid score another and it’s 4-4, and the sponsors/everyone marvels at both the spectacle of Barca’s talents and Madrid’s never-say-die attitude.
The worst thing Real Madrid could do right now is tell themselves that they have anything whatsoever to do with that parallel universe. Instead, after the 5-2 shellacking, coming on the back of a 4-0 humiliation at the Bernabeu in October and with another Clasico coming up in Barcelona towards the end of the season, the best thing to do is engage in some accountability.
It necessarily starts with Carlo Ancelotti, of course. He sets the team and sends them out; thinking you could cram Kylian Mbappé, Vinícius, Rodrygo and Jude Bellingham into some sort of 4-2-4 against this Barcelona side right now was a massive blunder. Having gone more conservative in the prior Clasico, he went out guns blazing in this one and got his backside handed to him from the start — let’s not forget the two huge early Thibaut Courtois saves.
Ancelotti will bear the brunt of the criticism and, to be fair, he’s used to it. But let’s not forget the elephant in the room: how this team was put together.
We’ve touched on it before. You’re one of the best-resourced clubs in the world and you go into the season with a squad whose three best forwards are all natural left-wingers (and whose main midfield attacking threat, Bellingham, also gravitates to the left). Toni Kroos, your midfield general, retires and you think you can be competitive with a guy who turns 40 in September (Luka Modric) and another guy who is, well, Dani Ceballos. You’ve got two central defenders coming off season-ending ACL injuries, and it doesn’t occur to you to add another centre-back to the squad.
As for Barcelona, Madrid’s deficiencies and self-inflicted wounds should not take anything away from their performance. However much Madrid played into their hands, Barca’s stars performed. Raphinha, Robert Lewandowski and, of course, Lamine Yamal will get the headlines — righty so, given the technical quality they showed — but credit has to go to the middle of the park. Marc Casadó, Gavi and Pedri played with an intensity and an intelligence that gave Barca the necessary platform to perform the way they did.
That’s about them, sure, but that’s also about Hansi Flick. Game-planning for this second Clasico given the circumstances (the Dani Olmo situation, the legacy of the first Clasico meeting this season) could not have been easy and yet he got just about everything right. Barcelona aren’t perfect and there are bound to be plenty more bumps along the way. It’s still high risk/high reward with Flick, especially because they’ve struggled against smaller clubs that sit deep, though with Gavi now fully fit that might change. But this Clasico win is a massive confidence boost.
Making up the six-point gap in LaLiga — especially because it’s not just Real Madrid they’d have to catch, but Atletico too — might be beyond them. Yet after days like this, you’d have to put them among the top two or three favourites for the Champions League.
Boost for Ruben Amorim goes way beyond Man United’s place in the FA Cup fourth round