Chapter 87: Steel against storm
Atletico Madrid may not be having the best campaign this season, but whenever they met the big 2, Real Madrid or Barcelona, their pride flares.
It’s no longer a game of just result and points, it’s a game of pride.
Their derby against Real Madrid was more personal. Afterall, born in the same city, this was a club that was always superior to them, a club that had beat them in the biggest stage twice, the UEFA Champions League final.
The rivalry and hatred ran deep.
It was always a war when these two sides clash in any competition.
Diego Simeone made the first change of the game in the second half, as he finally brought Antoine Griezmann on for Cardoso.
When the teams reemerged, the Riyadh air felt heavier, heat trapped beneath the roof like a forge. The derby had already singed nerves, but the second half promised to melt them.
Simeone clapped his players into a tight huddle, eyes blazing.
On the opposite touchline, Alonso’s hands traced sharp lines in the air; press triggers, passing lanes, the geometry of risk.
The noise rose to a rolling boil, and then...
FWEEEE!
The second half started with a banger, but Real Madrid jumped first.
Valverde detonated out of midfield, shouldering past the newly introduced Griezmann before teeing the ball to Bellingham, whose glide looked like a different sport; head up, shoulders still, feet whispering a melody of elegance.
He slid a vertical release to Vinícius on the left who darted across Llorente’s blindside and struck low.
POW!
Oblak’s boot saved it.
The rebound looped, and for a heartbeat the ball hung above the six-yard line like fate suspended.
Kylian Mbappé moved first.
Bzzz!
He ghosted between Lenglet and Le Normand, cushioned the ball with his chest, and without letting the ball fall, stabbed a toe-poke under Oblak’s arm.
Jan Oblak flailed his arms, but not enough...
GOAL!
The white detonated in the stands.
Mbappé didn’t celebrate long though, just a lean back, chin up, hands wide, a silent ’I am here’.
In the 49th minute, Real Madrid went up 2-1.
Diego Simeone’s jaw set.
He turned, clapping, summoning rage into discipline. Giovanni Simeone smashed palms with Griezmann. "Calma, pero con sangre".
After that... Atleti didn’t chase, they constricted.
When Madrid recycled to Alexander Arnold, Giovanni Simeone sprang the trap, pinching from the outside while Pablo Barrios jumped the interior passing lane. The press stung, and the ball ricocheted loose.
Giovanni Simeone pounced. He slipped, but quickly recovered and threaded Griezmann between the lines with a devilish pass.
Griezmann took one touch with the sole of his boot, drawing Militao toward him, then he feathered a pass behind Mendy for Sorloth.
The angle was brutal.
The finish? Almost perfect, low and across Courtois, kissing the far post and skidding out.
"...!"
Sorloth grabbed his head in disbelief.
Simeone threw both arms up to the sky as the Atleti end answered with drums. They were also stunned, but they kept the belief.
Sensing the growing momentum, Madrid tried to slow the pulse.
Bellingham held onto the ball and took fouls when offered. Valverde carried thirty meters and earned a free kick that Alexander Arnold knifed over the wall. Oblak flew, fingers iron, parrying to safety.
The match lived between grit and grace, unforgettably intense.
Marcus Llorente vs Vinicius turned feral. Vinícius twice rolled him with an elastico, and twice got scythed, as Llorente received a yellow the second time, and a stare from the Brazilian that could have split granite.
The tempo was insane.
Dean Huijsen? The Spaniard grew up by the minute, misreading one high ball, then winning three in a row, chest out, learning the derby in fire.
Arda Güler, lithe as smoke, slipped into pockets that didn’t exist, once nutmegging Griezmann to unlock Rodrygo at the byline.
Rodrygo’s cutback found Bellingham, but the shot cannoned off Clement Lenglet’s thigh as bodies flew to ground like shrapnel.
Atletico were chasing the game, and Diego Simeone gradually grew desperate. He sent Marcus Llorente forward like a lance on counters.
Alonso paced the touchline, palms down, trying to maintain control.
On the pitch, Federico Valverde remained the team’s heartbeat, a piston keeping the engine from stalling.
The minutes began to fold into each other, and soon, it felt like it was Jan Oblak against the world.
In the 63rd minute, Bellingham sculpted a pass that sliced Lenglet and Le Normand in half.
Mbappé curved his run perfectly and lashed across goal, but Oblak’s left hand telescoped... an impossible, elastic deflection around the post!
The Atleti goalkeeper stood, fists clenched as the fans in red roared him on.
Griezmann jogged over, ruffling his hair. "Gracias, Jan," he muttered to him.
At the other end, Courtois answered in kind.
Griezmann, rolled free by Giovanni Simeone whipped an early cross into the box. Sorloth flicked, and Alvarez volleyed with pure timing and lethal precision.
But Courtois exploded!
His frame uncoiled, pawing the shot wide in what felt like a show of ultra-instinct. The two goalkeepers were building a private epic on the night.
And then, late in the game, Diego Simeone finally played his card.
He hooked Thiago Almada for Ángel Correa, introducing fresh chaos.
Correa’s first action of the game was a spin off Huijsen’s shoulder to win a foul, followed by a grin that felt like he’d stolen a wallet.
Madrid’s back line shuffled deeper by a yard. That yard mattered.
Atleti pressed again.
Giovanni Simeone hunted Bellingham’s touch, Barrios slid across to block Valverde’s outlet, and Llorente sprinted into the vacuum behind Mendy.
The cutback reached Griezmann at the arc, and the Atleti veteran shaped the curler. Eder Militao threw a shin out, only to cause a deflection.
The deflection shivered past the post by inches!
"Arghhh...!" Simeone barked at the sky.
On the other side, Alonso finally snapped a change as he brought on Eduardo Camavinga for Güler. With that, Valverde pushed higher, and Bellingham’s leash loosened.
Madrid threatened to kill it.
Camavinga’s first intervention broke two lines to Vinícius. The Brazilian winger fed Mbappé, who squared to Rodrygo.
Rodrygo had an open net before him... but when he took the shot, Lenglet’s desperate sliding block arrived as if teleported.
The Atleti fans roared.
Time ticked, breathless and elastic.
In the 78th minute, Bellingham found Valverde who played a one-touch to Mbappé, who accelerated through a pore of space nobody else saw.
The Frenchman rounded Oblak on the stretch. The angle closed with that action but daring, Mbappe went for the tight-rope finish from near the byline.
He hit the side netting.
Mbappé slapped the post, then his own forehead in slight frustration.
Diego Simeone turned, arms aloft, whipping the Atleti end into greater frenzy. "Stay alive!" He barked.
Alonso also barked on the touchline. "Head! Head!" He roared as he couldn’t help his eyes flicking to the clock.
[79’]
The game trembled on a pinhead.
Madrid just had to hold on for 10 minutes now, but that was exactly when Atleti clapped their comeback.
It came like a knife slipped between armor plates.
Madrid tried to play out under pressure as Camavinga gave Alexander-Arnold a hospital pass he still almost rescued. Carrasco harried and got a toe in, forcing a throw.
Atleti played a quick restart as Barrios snapped it to Correa, who shifted it one meter left to Griezmann, twenty-five yards out, unattended for a breath.
The enigmatic Frenchman didn’t smash, rather, he passed the ball into the far corner with malicious calm.
The net snapped; Courtois’ full stretch found just air.
GOAL!
The stadium exploded.
Antoine Griezmann jogged away, index finger to his temple, eyes pale ice. The red and white end became an earthquake.
83rd minute, Real Madrid 2-2 Atletico.
What... a game.
Alonso stood frozen for half a second, then clapped violently. "Vamos! Heads up! Heads up!" He roared at his players.
Now it was open flame.
For the final minutes, Madrid hurled bodies forward, Alexander Arnold overlapping like a winger, Valverde hurling himself through gaps, Bellingham demanding the ball as if he could bend time with his palms.
Real Madrid got a free kick on 86th minute.
Trent’s service was wicked as Militao’s forehead met it; the ball kissed the crossbar and spun over.
Militao turned, eyes wide, as if the goal had betrayed a pact.
Atleti countered with poison.
Correa darted behind Mendy and squared for Alvarez, whose shot took a microscopic nick off Huijsen and skidded wide. Simeone roared at the fourth official, at the ball, at the universe, at everything.
And then, the final minute of normal time...
Bellingham slipped Mbappé in again. This time the Frenchman shot early, but Oblak’s knee said no.
The referee gave four minutes of additional time.
In minute +2, Vinícius ripped Llorente one more time and cut for Rodrygo. But Le Normand arrived on a diagonal miracle and blocked with everything, as he sprawled panting in the grass, grinning through pain.
FWEEEE!
The whistle cut the stadium like a blade.
[FULL-TIME: Real Madrid 2-2 Atletico Madrid]
Players doubled over in exhaustion.
The noise didn’t dip; it shifted, lower and darker now, a promise of more pain.
Extra time waited in the tunnel like a storm that had learned its name.