Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 17th February 2026, 9:45 AM
Fate has a curious way of shaping European nights. Barely weeks after a pulsating league-phase encounter, Real Madrid and Benfica find themselves reunited in the play-off for the last sixteen of the UEFA Champions League. What might have seemed improbable has swiftly become reality: another chapter in a rivalry that, while not frequent, has produced drama of the highest order.
The immediate backdrop is still fresh in the memory. On the final matchday of the league phase at Lisbon’s imposing Estádio da Luz, qualification scenarios hung delicately in the balance. A place in the round of sixteen awaited one side directly; the other would be forced into the uncertainty of the play-offs. Benfica prevailed 4–2 on the night, and by the narrowest of margins denied Madrid automatic progression.
Real struck first. Kylian Mbappé’s 30th-minute finish appeared to steady the Spanish side. Yet Benfica responded within six minutes, levelling the score before edging ahead via a penalty in first-half stoppage time. Early in the second period they extended their advantage to 3–1. Mbappé’s second goal on 58 minutes reduced the deficit to 3–2 and, crucially, restored Madrid’s hopes of bypassing the play-offs.
Then came the decisive moment. With stoppage time ebbing away and the aggregate implications clear, Benfica won a free-kick. Goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin ventured forward in desperation. His towering header sealed a 4–2 victory — a single additional goal that altered the destiny of both clubs.
Historically, Benfica have enjoyed the upper hand in this fixture.
| Season/Year | Competition | Result | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1962 | European Cup Final | Benfica 5–3 Real Madrid | Amsterdam |
| 1964–65 | European Cup QF (1st leg) | Benfica 5–1 Real Madrid | Lisbon |
| 1964–65 | European Cup QF (2nd leg) | Real Madrid 2–1 Benfica | Madrid |
| 2026 | Champions League League Phase | Benfica 4–2 Real Madrid | Lisbon |
Across four European encounters, Benfica have won three, Real Madrid one. Yet history offers only partial guidance. Madrid remain the most decorated club in Champions League history, synonymous with resilience in knockout football. An “injured king”, as Benfica’s coach observed, is often at his most dangerous.
Elsewhere on the same evening, European competition witnesses a first continental meeting between Paris Saint-Germain and AS Monaco. Though new to Europe, their domestic rivalry is well established: in 50 matches across competitions, PSG have won 23, Monaco 13, with 14 draws. Form may favour the Parisians, yet derby contests seldom obey statistical logic.
As the clock ticks towards kick-off, anticipation builds. For Benfica, it is a chance to reaffirm historical superiority. For Real Madrid, it is an opportunity for swift redemption. European nights rarely disappoint — and this one promises theatre once more.
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