MADRID — Karim Benzema scored a first-half hat trick as Real Madrid beat Almeria 4-2 in LaLiga on Saturday.
Benzema put Madrid ahead just five minutes in — Vinicius Junior providing the assist — before adding a second on 17 minutes after Rodrygo‘s outrageous flick beat defender Samuel Costa, and then converting a penalty on 42 minutes when Lucas Vazquez was fouled by Largie Ramazani.
Almeria’s Lazaro pulled a goal back before half-time, but Madrid extended their lead shortly after the break, Rodrygo scoring from distance, before Lucas Robertone’s header made it 4-2. Madrid could have added to their tally late on, as Benzema hit the post and Eduardo Camavinga had a goal disallowed for offside.
Rapid reaction
1. Madrid bounce back after Girona shock
Madrid’s pride was stung by Tuesday’s surprise 4-2 defeat at Girona — both the scoreline, and the passive nature of their defending — and this was the emphatic response. From kickoff, the team looked determined to prove that what happened at Montilivi was a one-off, and that Madrid will be taking their remaining LaLiga games seriously.
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That attitude was personified by the front three of Benzema, Vinicius and Rodrygo, who delivered a ruthless first-half display of dizzying speed, gasp-inducing skill and razor-sharp finishing. Almeria’s defence didn’t know what had hit them. In midfield, Dani Ceballos, Aurelien Tchouameni and Toni Kroos were first to every ball.
Almeria’s two goals — both defensive lapses — were the only sour note. Yes, Almeria are relegation candidates who have conceded 57 goals in LaLiga this season — only bottom-of-the-table Elche have shipped more — but that didn’t detract from what was a focused, convincing performance. Madrid are back on track ahead of one of the biggest weeks of their season.
2. Goal-scoring records keep falling for Benzema
Another game, another record for Benzema. This hat trick took him to 236 LaLiga goals. He passed Alfredo di Stefano (227) in January, Raul Gonzalez (228) in February and now Hugo Sanchez (234) is the latest Real Madrid legend to be overtaken in the league’s all-time goal-scoring charts. Only three players remain ahead of him: Telmo Zarra, who scored 251 goals for Athletic Club in the 1940s and ’50s, and two names who need no introduction: Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.
Ignoring the historical dimension, there’s a very current goal-scoring race for Benzema to keep in mind, too. He now has 17 league goals this season, one fewer than Barcelona’s Robert Lewandowski. Benzema would love to secure the Pichichi trophy — awarded to LaLiga’s top goal scorer — for another year, having won it for the first time in 2022.
It’s also worth noting that the volume of goals needed to be crowned Pichichi isn’t what it used to be. Messi scored 50 league goals in 2011-12. Ronaldo scored 48 in 2014-15. Luis Suarez scored 40 in 2015-16. Benzema took top spot with 27 goals last season, and with six games left to play, might not reach that tally this time around.
3. Ceballos leads race to replace Modric
Friday’s news that Luka Modric had suffered a thigh injury came at the worst possible time for Madrid, with a Copa del Rey final against Osasuna to come on May 6 and a Champions League semifinal first leg with Manchester City on May 9. Madrid aren’t definitively ruling Modric out of both those games, but it’s a race against time, and so this match — coupled with Tuesday’s trip to Real Sociedad — will likely serve as auditions for the midfielders hoping to step in for the veteran.
Carlo Ancelotti has identified Ceballos as the most likely candidate, who can best approximate Modric’s superlative qualities. This was a persuasive performance. Only Kroos had more touches and completed more passes. Ceballos brings something of Modric’s busy energy and drive, even if there isn’t quite the same end product. With Camavinga doing such an impressive job at left-back, there’s less competition than there might have been, too.
Best and worst performers
BEST: Karim Benzema, Real Madrid. A clinical hat trick, even if they weren’t the most difficult goals he’ll ever score.
BEST: Rodrygo, Real Madrid. Provided the two moments of the match with his assist for Benzema’s second goal, and his own strike after half-time.