Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 11th January 2026, 11:33 PM
In a spectacle that mirrored the shifting sands of the Arabian Peninsula, Barcelona secured a pulsating 3-2 victory over Real Madrid to clinch the Spanish Super Cup. Held at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium in Jeddah, the match—affectionately dubbed the “Desert Thriller”—saw Hansi Flick’s side maintain their domestic dominance and extend the manager’s extraordinary record of winning every final he has ever contested.
The opening half-hour offered little indication of the chaos to follow. Real Madrid, under the stewardship of Xabi Alonso, adopted a surprisingly passive stance. Lacking their trademark offensive urgency, Los Blancos sat deep, surrendered possession, and struggled to regain the ball once lost.
Barcelona eventually capitalised on this lethargy in the 35th minute. Just moments after dragging a shot wide, Raphinha made amends by ghosting into the box and slotting past Thibaut Courtois. While the goal was deserved, it was merely the spark for an unprecedented explosion of scoring. In the three minutes of stoppage time added to the first half, the scoreboard fluctuated with a frequency rarely seen in the history of the Clásico.
The Stoppage Time Sequence:
46th Minute: Gonzalo García levels for Madrid after a goalmouth scramble.
47th Minute: Vinícius Júnior produces a moment of individual genius, nutmegging Jules Koundé before firing home to end a personal 19-match goal drought.
49th Minute: Robert Lewandowski restores parity with a deft touch following a sublime through-ball from Pedri.
The teams headed into the “interval” locked at 2-2, having produced a half of football that felt more like a cinematic masterpiece than a sporting contest.
| Metric | FC Barcelona | Real Madrid |
|---|---|---|
| Final Score | 3 | 2 |
| Total Shots | 16 | 12 |
| Shots on Target | 7 | 10 |
| Key Performer | Raphinha (2 Goals) | Vinícius Júnior (1 Goal) |
| Discipline | 1 Red Card (De Jong) | 0 Red Cards |
| Historical Trend | Super Cup Winner (2025) | League Runner-up (Current) |
The second half, while less prolific in goals, remained high in intensity. The decisive moment arrived in the 73rd minute. Raphinha, off-balance at the edge of the area, unleashed a desperate strike. The ball took a wicked deflection off Madrid defender Raúl Asencio, wrong-footing Courtois and nestling into the net.
Real Madrid sought an equaliser by introducing the returning Kylian Mbappé, who had been sidelined with a knee injury. Mbappé’s impact was immediate but unconventional; his presence provoked a reckless foul from Frenkie de Jong, resulting in a red card for the Dutchman. Despite playing the final moments with ten men, Barcelona’s defence held firm. Joan García produced two vital saves in the dying seconds—denying Alvaro Carreras and Asencio—to ensure the trophy remained in Catalonia.
This victory serves as a measure of revenge for Barcelona, who suffered a 2-1 defeat to Madrid in La Liga last October. For Hansi Flick, this marks his 15th consecutive trophy win in 15 finals, an unblemished record that cements his reputation as a big-game specialist.
Crucially, history suggests this win may portend further success. For the past three seasons, the winner of the Spanish Super Cup has gone on to secure the La Liga title. With Barcelona currently holding a four-point lead at the top of the table and riding a ten-match domestic winning streak, the “Super Cup Curse” looks set to favour the Blaugrana once more.
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