Chapter 120: A Deluge? Nah, too polite... a Smashing!
The tunnel smelled of nerves and hot adrenaline as players drank, stretched, and breathed fog into the chilly Andalusian night.
Xabi Alonso’s voice was quiet and deliberate, the opposite of panic despite the halftime result as he addressed his players.
He moved through the group like a man with iron in his pocket. He placed a hand on Bellingham’s shoulder, another on Mbappé’s back, and then looked around the room.
"They’re tired now," he said with a subtle smile on his face, as calm as a metronome. "They bled a lot in the first half. Now, you keep your heads, keep the structure, and keep the pressure, then go kill them".
He grinned. "They can’t withstand the pressure now".
There was no theatrical roar in response to his speech, no venom either, just a sentence with the weight of certainty and it landed like a pledge.
Sevilla had done it against all odds in the first half, holding Real Madrid to a stalemate. The momentum was still with them, all they had to do now was push.
This was the sentiment among the home fans as their players trudged back into the pitch with fire in their eyes.
Then...
FWEEE!
The referee’s whistle cracked, and the second half detonated.
The game barely started when Real Madrid struck like lightning in just 2 minutes of the restart in the 47th minute.
As soon as the referee’s whistle sounded, just like the first half, Sevilla burst from their end of the field with desperate energy, but the press that had worked so well in the first half finally showed cracks.
Camavinga, having read the game like a book, intercepted a sloppy pass on the edge of the box and immediately threaded a laser to Mbappé, who instantly set off the afterburners and peeled off his marker like a flick of a switch.
BZZZ!
Mbappe was like breeze in a storm.
When he got to the ball, just like his first goal, his first touch was velvet, but his second was a beauty as he drove into the box and curled a low shot around the goalkeeper and into the near post.
1–2.
"..."
The stadium was silenced.
The Sánchez-Pizjuán exhaled and then inhaled like a beast in pain, as the sight of Mbappe rushing off with the ball with only a finger to his lips in celebration pricked their hearts like a needle.
Sevilla had been worked; Madrid had found their rhythm and with it the away end, a pocket of white and nervous joy suddenly expanded.
After that, the momentum of the game became a torrent as Real Madrid took charge for the first time all game.
In the 53rd minute, Vinícius received the ball and created space for himself as he danced at the left flank. His stepovers weren’t just for show though, they were knives that pried Sevilla’s defense open.
A quick exchange with Rodrygo opened a seam and when he drove into the box, he set up a perfect cross that Mbappé met with the side of his boot.
Bam!
It was a simple, savage finish.
1–3.
Sevilla’s goalkeeper flung himself at the ball, but the stadium had already sensed the inevitable and they were right as the ball found its way into the net.
The white shirts surged in the stands, and the Pizjuán’s drums suddenly sounded tiny and distant, the crowd losing its heartbeat to Madrid’s avalanche.
They could smell a disaster approaching, and they were right.
Real Madrid didn’t stop even after Mbappe already got his hattrick. Alonso’s men smelled blood and moved like wolves.
Bellingham’s engine never ceased. Tonight, it hummed at a higher frequency as in the 58th minute, he picked up the ball in midfield, spun away from marker, before making a run that bent Sevilla’s frame inward.
At the top of the box he slipped a pass to Rodrygo, who fed it back in a single, devastating one-two that left Sevilla’s defense chasing ghosts.
Bellingham arrived on the left channel and smashed the ball past a wrong-footed defender and Vlachodimos.
1–4.
"Vamos!" A lone Madridista on the stands yelled, his voice torn raw with passion as Madrid’s comeback ignited a fire inside of him.
Not just the fans, Madrid’s bench erupted into furious celebration as players collapsed into a heap, then sprang up again. It was all business, no gloating.
Madrid were still not satisfied.
In the 66th minute, they brought the cavalry.
Sevilla attempted to stop the bleeding with subs, but their center of gravity had been broken. The higher they pressed, the more gaps they left to exploit and having figured them out already, that space was an invitation.
Rodrygo, Mbappé, and Bellingham took turns piercing it.
A threaded pass from Mbappé sliced through the field to Vinícius on the left who immediately erupted into action.
He shifted his hips, accelerated, and produced a left-footed trivela across goal that kissed the far post and slid into the net!
The commentators were going crazy as they roared his name.
1–5 Madrid.
It was a trouncing now.
Vinicius’s goal was the kind of goal that leaves defenders suspended in disbelief, a perfect geometry of speed, angle and execution. In the stands, scarves dropped as faces went slack.
Real Madrid was swimming now.
Still not satisfied, in the 74th minute, they turned momentum into humiliation for the home side.
Sevilla’s attempts to rally turned frantic.
Their shape unraveled as they chased the game. Camavinga and Valverde took over midfield, starving Sevilla of possession. Every recovery became a chance, and every chance became a statement.
In the 74th minute, Mbappé, always hungry despite his hattrick already intercepted a back pass, then accelerated into acres of open grass before clipping a cheeky finish into the roof of the net, sending Madrid fans into waves of ecstasy.
1–6.
That made it 4 goals for the night!
Real Madrid’s white contingent celebrated with a mixture of relief and awe. This wasn’t just an away win, this was a lesson.
But, you think that was enough?
Nah, Madrid went again to add the final nail in the 86th minute.
At first, they slowed the tempo not out of mercy but to savor the dismantling. Yet still they pushed, still they hunted for perfection.
Bellingham, who had been the engine of the first half and the surgeon in the second wasn’t done. He weaved between two markers, then three, chesting a pass down to Mbappé who laid it off without looking.
Bellingham ghosted into the box, and at the last heartbeat he guided a near-post finish that grazed the inside of the post before thudding home.
1–7!
Disbelief and ecstasy for Madrid fans, tears for Sevilla fans.
The final whistle might as well have been a ceremonial gavel.
Madrid had not just won a cup tie in one leg, they had announced arrival.
But even in celebration, there was gravitas. This performance would be dissected, taught, and feared across Spain.
Sevilla’s ultras sat numb at the end, their flares guttering into smoke.
Players who had been fired up at kickoff now trudged off like men on a pilgrimage of shame. The manager applauded his team’s effort but even he could not hide the stinging honesty; tonight, the better team simply overran them.
In the mixed zone, cameras hungrily hunted for headlines. Xabi Alonso, composed as ever, fielded questions with that quiet, incisive demeanor.
"We were sharper in the second half," he said. "We found our movement and took advantage. Credit to the players, they delivered."
Bellingham, still breathless from all the running smiled and shrugged at the camera. "They were tired. We saw it, and we kept the pressure. When we get our chances, we finish them. That’s Madrid."
Mbappé, still soaked in sweat and shadow, shrugged off the talk of obliteration. "Football is about moments and runs. Tonight, we had both."
[Man of the Match: Jude Bellingham]
Despite Mbappe’s stunning 4 goals, he was not the best player on the pitch, Jude Bellingham was. He was Madrid’s engine in the first half, keeping the team composed, and in the second he exploded with his brace and 2 assists that orchestrated Madrid’s demolition job.
For Madrid, the tie was more or less decided already; it would take a genuine miracle for Sevilla to come back from this, and at the Bernabeu? Nah, no chance.
Madrid were through.
For the wider season, it was a reminder that even in a race of titans, one side could find a day where everything aligned, and in that alignment the rest of the world had to watch and take notes.