Alexander Sørloth stuns Barcelona with last-gasp winner for Atlético Madrid

Published on Dec 21, 2024

They were 95 minutes into the battle that been built as the clash that would decide the title, the final seconds slipping away, when a man who looks for all the world like a norse warrior delivered the decisive blow. Atlético Madrid had suffered, they had resisted and, in truth, they had probably longed for that final whistle to go, and then suddenly Alex Sørloth thumped in another late winner. In doing so he sent Atlético Madrid top the table at Christmas and their coach, staff and subs sprinting onto the pitch.

Barcelona’s fans meanwhile turned and headed straight for the exit, unable to believe what had just happened. What had happened was this: on a night when they had more than enough chances to win it, including deep into added time, in which Jan Oblak, the goalkeeper had been the best player on the pitch, with Pedri, they had somehow been beaten. It is the first time they have ever fallen at the hands of a Diego Simeone led Atlético team and it hurt.

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For Atlético meanwhile it was a liberation, maybe even the call of destiny. The perfect night Oblak called it. How fast this had shifted, how unexpectedly. How significantly too, and not just here but the season.

Life had changed for both of these sides since the end of October, and the league had changed with it. Barcelona had been through what Hansi Flick described as “shit November” but then been beaten in December too, and at home against relegation threatened Leganes. Over six games, they had collected just five of eighteen possible points, a title that had looked theirs to lose after the clásico seemingly being lost in record time; Atlético, meanwhile, had won eleven in a row, six out of six in la Liga. From ten points down, they had moved level with a game in hand.

This would be a battle for the league, after all. “It’s a key moment and we will be ready,” Flick had said and his players appeared determined to prove him right, even in the absence of Lamine Yamal. They had not won any of the four games he had missed and this had to be different. A couple of days off had been designed to “clear their minds” he said. Here, they flew into Atlético, an intensity in everything they did that had been absent of late. Gavi, Fermin Lopez and Raphinha led the charge, the latter swinging in repeated deliveries. Behind, Pedri was playing at a pace of his own, at once fast and slow, as if able to let bring the storm and also let it roll past him.

It felt fitting that he should open the scoring just before the half hour. Setting off from the left, he slid inside, played the ball into Gavi and kept running. Gavi’s return to him would have been a gorgeous first time touch on the turn had he meant it but it is more likely that it was fortunate. Either way, Pedri saw if first – Pedri saw everything first – and, dashing into the area, with Marcos Llorente and Clement Lenglet trying but failing to slide the doors closed, he guided the shot beyond Oblak and into the bottom corner.

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Rodrigo De Paul equalises for Atlético Madrid. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images

This was more like the Barcelona of the big night, the team that beat Madrid and Bayern, not that lost to Leganes and Las Palmas. Twice Conor Gallagher had had to dive in to stop Raphinha already, blocking a shot on two minutes and halting his run just before the goal. That said, Raphinha did later get revenge with a nutmeg on Gallagher.

José María Giménez and Lenglet had been involved often too, just about holding Barcelona at the gate but not able to venture out themsleves. Robert Lewandowski headed over, Gavi headed wide and a lovely Pedri pass looked like it had released Raphinha but Lenglet was there again. And Oblak punched away Inigo Martínez’s thumping shot. While Atlético were close to releasing runners into space a couple of times, but mostly this was about resisting, until right on half time Gallagher and Javi Galan set up for Julián Álvarez, sprinting in, to turn his shot just over from close range.

The second half brought a second wave, rather than a reaction and it was Pedri controlling the tide. He played in Fermin in the very first minute, only for Oblak to save with his foot and clipped a superb pass that set Raphinha away. The Brazilian lifted it over the keeper, but the ball came back off the bar.

On the touchline, Simeone was preparing his first change, which tends to be when games change, just not like this. More subs have scored for Atlético than any other team; this time the threat alone was enough. Koke and Nahuel Molina were standing, waiting to be introduced when out of nowhere Atlético drew level. Rodrigo De Paul, probably a candidate to be withdrawn, set Álvarez scurrying up the left, beyond the defence. His curled ball in was cut out by Marc Casado, which served only to tee it up for De Paul to side-foot it into the corner.

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The score was different, but the game was still not what Simeone sought, the sense of danger all the more acute since Giménez had been forced off. Barcelona should have led when Raphinha crossed to Ferran Torres who laid it to Lewandowski. Alone, barely three yards out, somehow he failed to get a decent contact on the ball. A moment later, Atlético could say the same when Álvarez set up Pablo Barrios, a wonderful chance saved by Inaki Pena. A goal seemed likely: no one had scored more in the last fifteen minutes than these two, 13 for Atletico, 12 for Barcelona.

The question perhaps was who would get there first. For whoever did, the top of the table awaited. Barcelona were the better bet, and certainly the more determined for seek the winner. Dani Olmo worked space for a shot that bent just wide and then, with five minutes left, Raphinha was suddenly clear into space, the Olympic stadium getting to its feet. Oblak, somehow saved then, and again a moment later when Pedri got in, neatly controlling Olmo’s ball through the forest of feet. This, surely, was it. Again, though, Oblak was there. On the touchline Marcus Sorg, the Barcelona assistant coach was hopping like Yosemite Sam, unable to fathom this.

What followed next was even more implausible, space suddenly open, Sørloth there to end it.

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