Manchester City secured a masive result on Wednesday evening, overcoming Real Madrid 2-1 at the Santiago Bernabeu to claim three vital Champions League points. The victory pushes City’s tally to 13 points and formally confirms their place, at the very least, in the knockout playoff stage.
Despite a brief moment of anxiety when Rodrygo put the hosts ahead in the 28th minute, City demonstrated their resilience with a swift first-half response. Nico O’Reilly restored parity in the 35th minute, before Erling Haaland ensured City went into the break ahead, converting a penalty in the 43rd minute.
O’Reilly and Haaland: Records and Relief
The young goalscorer, O’Reilly (aged 20 years and 264 days), etched his name into the history books, becoming the second-youngest player to score for an English team against Real Madrid in the UEFA Champions League era. Only Alan Smith, who scored for Leeds in March 2001 (20 years, 129 days), managed the feat younger.
The left-back’s performance was rightly celebrated, earning him the Player of the Match award. The UEFA Technical Observer Group praised his tactical flexibility: “He put in a very good performance, playing in different positions and scoring a vital goal. He was tactically astute as a left-back but also carried out multiple roles in City’s possession game, proving integral in their transitions in the first half and stopping Real Madrid’s after the break.”
Shining on the big stage 💫 pic.twitter.com/xAMKgxQWG7
— Manchester City (@ManCity) December 10, 2025
O’Reilly was quick to point to the collective prize: “This goal will be with me forever, but the most important thing was three points, and that’s what we got.”
Meanwhile, Erling Haaland marked his 50th Champions League start in typically devastating fashion, scoring his 55th goal in the competition. In doing so, he cemented his place as the fastest player to reach the 55-goal milestone, achieving the total in just 54 games.
| Player | Games Needed to Reach 55 Goals |
| Erling Haaland | 54 |
| Ruud van Nistelrooy | 70 |
| Lionel Messi | 73 |
| Robert Lewandowski | 82 |
| Cristiano Ronaldo | 94 |
| Kylian Mbappé | 83 |
Guardiola Demands Better Preparation
For Haaland, the result was crucial after a recent league stumble: “It could have looked completely different today if we didn’t win, because we lost against Leverkusen, so this win is really important. Now we’ve got two more games left, so we need to finish strongly now, and hopefully we can be in there [the top eight].”
Manager Pep Guardiola, however, conceded that the fixture exposed several shortcomings and stressed the need for improvement if City are to harbour trophy ambitions.
“Every time they had the ball, they punished us, especially with Rodrygo,” Guardiola admitted. “We couldn’t get into the game until the goal. For many of my guys, it was the first time coming here to this stadium. Maybe this will be a benefit; maybe in February we’ll be better prepared thanks to this.”
Guardiola elaborated on Madrid’s unique challenge: “Real Madrid were much better than us in stages; we could run and run, but we were often too late to situations, to deny space. We managed games against Sunderland and Fulham very differently, but Madrid traditionally do this. Their stadium loves games like this. We will learn. In special circumstances, we will improve.”
Four more teams into the knockout phase ✅#UCL pic.twitter.com/prqgwY2TM1
— UEFA Champions League (@ChampionsLeague) December 10, 2025



