Chapter 44: Fire under London lights
While Barcelona toiled for a victory in Italy at the San Siro, Real Madrid fought their own fight somewhere in London.
[UEFA Champions League – Matchday 6:]
[Chelsea vs Real Madrid]
[Venue: Stamford Bridge]
It was an epic UEFA Champions League fixture that left the whole world buzzing in excitement even more than AC Milan vs Barcelona.
London was alive.
The streets around Fulham buzzed with blue shirts and Madrid white, pubs spilling into the night, chants dueling in the cold September air. Stamford Bridge was dressed for war, a fortress pulsing with the heartbeat of Europe.
They were facing the literal Kings of the UEFA Champions League, Real Madrid, but they weren’t ones to be looked down on.
Chelsea had a reputation for creating big nights in the Champions League. They’ve knocked the Spanish Capital giant down before, they could do it again, and the fans created the perfect atmosphere for an unforgettable European night in the stadium.
Besides, with their reinforcements, Chelsea was no longer that toothless club of past seasons. With lethal strikers, Joao Pedro and Liam Delap in the lineup, Chelsea had teeth and could bite.
Inside the tunnel, both lined up, giants in their own right. Madrid, the kings of the Champions League. Chelsea, reigning Club World Cup Champions, desperate to show the world they still belonged at the summit.
Xabi Alonso stood tall, calm in his black coat, arms folded. This was his first European night as a Manager at the Bridge, and he exuded serenity. Across the way, Chelsea’s coach barked final orders, gesturing wildly.
The starting XI of both clubs were released an hour before time.
Chelsea started in a 4-2-3-1 formation with Renato Sanchez in goal, while ahead of him was the defensive quadruple of Reece James, Acheampong, Trevor Chalobah, and Marc Cucurella. In midfield was the dynamic duo of Enzo Fernandez and Moses Caicedo.
Upfront were the quadruple of Pedro Neto on the left, Gittens on the right, Cole Palmer as the attacking midfielder, and Joao Pedro as the striker.
For Real Madrid, they started in their regular 4-3-3, Courtois in goal, while standing in his front were the 4-man defense of Trent Alexander Arnold, Rudiger, Huijsen, and Mendy. The midfield trio comprised Valverde, Arda Guler, and Jude Bellingham.
As for the attacking trio, it was Rodrygo, Mbappe, and Vinicius Jnr.
The die was cast.
The world’s eyes were glued to this lineup. Endrick, Brahim Diaz, Goncalo Garcia all sat on the bench, waiting for their turn. Carvajal and Dani Ceballos, legends, also stood ready, living relics of Madrid’s dynasty.
And then...
FWEEE!
When the whistle blew, Stamford Bridge erupted.
The opening minutes were chaos. Chelsea pressed high, snapping into duels, Enzo Fernandez dictating tempo. Madrid, though, were unbothered. Alonso’s men played out calmly, Trent switching play with sweeping diagonals, Güler threading passes with surgical precision.
But it was Chelsea who landed the first punch.
In the 12th minute, Cole Palmer drifted between the lines, collected a sharp pass, and slipped it wide to Gittens. Gittens’s low cut-back found Pedro, who spun and fired low into the corner.
1–0 Chelsea.
It was a textbook team goal, and Chelsea fans absolutely adored it as the Bridge exploded, blue flags waving violently.
The commentator roared.
"Chelsea strike first! Madrid stunned!"
"What a team goal!"
The goal jolted Madrid awake.
Mbappé, prowling like a predator, suddenly burst to life as in the 18th minute. He surged down the left, burning Acheampong with sheer pace before whipping a ball across the face of goal. Vinícius lunged, but Sanchez smothered.
In the 24th minute, Madrid tried again.
This time, it was Rodrygo who cut inside from the right and unleashed a curling strike. The ball cannoned off the bar, drawing gasps from the away section.
Xabi Alonso clapped calmly on the sideline, urging patience. He could tell that the momentum of the game was slowly swinging in his team’s favor.
His eyes flicked to Güler, and the young Turk understood.
In the 29th minute, Madrid’s patience finally bore fruit.
Bellingham muscled Caicedo off the ball in midfield, and quickly released Güler. With a single glance, and with the outside of his boot, Güler pinged a lofted ball over Chelsea’s defense.
Mbappé ghosted in behind, chest-controlled, and lifted the ball over the onrushing keeper with insulting ease.
1–1.
The Madrid bench leapt as one in celebration. Alonso barely moved, only a faint smile curling his lips.
After that, it was an end to end war.
Chelsea refused to wilt. Gittens tormented Trent with pace, cutting inside for a fierce strike in the 35th minute but Courtois parried, sprawling low. Seconds later, Enzo fired a rocket from distance that whistled inches past the post.
Chelsea were having their moment, till Madrid countered instantly. Vinícius skinned James on the flank, squared across, but Rodrygo skied the finish.
The game became a slugfest, one chance here, one chance there, as the Bridge rocked with every swing of the momentum.
But then, there was a blow just before halftime...
In the 44th minute, Chelsea struck again.
Caicedo intercepted Güler high, fed Cole Palmer, who slid Pedro Neto into space. Neto cut back onto his left, and curled into the far corner.
2–1 Chelsea!
BOOM!
The stadium shook as blue fire scattered everywhere. Madrid’s defenders looked at each other, stunned. Even Alonso tilted his head, lips tight.
As halftime approached, Chelsea fans sang loud enough to rattle the steel beams above. When the whistle finally blew, Madrid trudged toward the tunnel, heads down. The commentators sharpened their knives.
"What a first half we just witnessed at the Bridge!"
"Is Alonso’s Madrid vulnerable after all? Chelsea are flying, and Madrid look rattled".
Inside Madrid’s locker room was a cauldron. Dissatisfied with their performance, players slammed boots and muttered curses. Vinícius waved his arms furiously. Mbappé, stone-faced, stared at the floor.
Then Alonso spoke. He spoke softly, but with steel.
"This is not who we are," he looked at his players. "They have fire. But we are Madrid. We are the storm. Play with patience, trust the press, trust yourselves, and the second half will not be theirs."
The words hung heavy. Slowly, the tension melted.
Valverde pounded his chest. Bellingham’s jaw clenched. Mbappé finally stood, fire in his eyes.
Madrid were ready to unleash hell.
[HALF-TIME: Chelsea 2–1 Real Madrid]
The London crowd roared, daring to dream of a famous upset.
But the storm was only beginning.