Old Habits Kick In as Benzema-led Madrid Comeback Stuns PSG

Real Madrid's French forward Karim Benzema celebrates his hat-trick against PSG. GABRIEL BOUYS AFP
Real Madrid's French forward Karim Benzema celebrates his hat-trick against PSG. GABRIEL BOUYS AFP
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Old Habits Kick In as Benzema-led Madrid Comeback Stuns PSG

Real Madrid's French forward Karim Benzema celebrates his hat-trick against PSG. GABRIEL BOUYS AFP
Real Madrid's French forward Karim Benzema celebrates his hat-trick against PSG. GABRIEL BOUYS AFP

"Real Madrid are still alive," said Karim Benzema, the 34-year-old striker who scored a second-half hat-trick as Paris Saint-Germain again self-destructed in the Champions League knockout stages.

PSG were cruising at 2-0 up on aggregate after Kylian Mbappe's 39th-minute strike, AFP reported.

For an hour the Paris club looked assured of a last-eight berth, but Benzema turned the tie on its head with three goals in 17 minutes as Real swept to a 3-1 win and 3-2 aggregate triumph.

Even by PSG's standards, this was an epic collapse, five years to the day since Barcelona overturned a 4-0 last-16 first-leg deficit against them by winning 6-1 at Camp Nou.

Lionel Messi and Neymar were in Barcelona colors that day, but both were on the receiving end this time, unable to rid PSG of their habit of crumbling when it matters most.

Madrid's comeback may not have matched that night in Barcelona for scale or drama –- Benzema's winner came in the 78th minute not the 95th and Madrid came from two behind, not four -– but the impact might be greater.

In the year of the controversial World Cup in Qatar, Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe were stitched together with limitless resources from the oil-rich Gulf state to win the Champions League, not crash out in the last 16.

Defeat throws Mauricio Pochettino's future as coach into serious doubt, raises further questions about Messi's departure from Barca and prolongs the Qatari-owned club's wait for that elusive European crown, despite more than a billion euros splurged on transfers.

- Mbappe closer to leaving -
"We have not managed our emotions well and we left ourselves too exposed," said Pochettino.

Mbappe took a step closer to leaving. The 23-year-old, out of contract in the summer, was at his scintillating best at his prospective new Santiago Bernabeu home, where the Madrid fans applauded his name.

Mbappe's sales pitch, if he needed one, was perfect. He showed why he is regarded as the best player in the world at the moment, while Madrid in return confirmed they are a more serious European title-winning prospect than PSG.

When Zinedine Zidane led Real Madrid to Champions League victory in 2018, they enjoyed a run of similar great escapes in the knock-out stage, and few believed they could win the trophy then either.

Doubts linger around Carlo Ancelotti's side at the very highest level. For the entirety of the first leg in Paris and for 60 minutes of the second, Madrid were inferior to PSG, who made them look slow, heavy-legged and like a team whose core are in their mid-thirties.

It is possible the likes of Manchester City, Liverpool, Chelsea or Bayern Munich would do the same, but without the late capitulation.

And yet this is not the first time Madrid have proven themselves to be great survivors on the European stage. Through experience, belief and sheer force of will, Real Madrid always tend to go further than they should.

- 'Mental strength' -
"We have suffered a lot, but we have endured. After (our) first goal there was only one team on the pitch," said Ancelotti.

"We won the match with our mental strength," said Benzema.

In Benzema, they have one of the world's classiest strikers, an all-rounder getting better with age who sent a message that he wants to play with, not instead of, his fellow Frenchman Mbappe if he arrives in Madrid.

Luka Modric was sensational again, stepping up in the second half, the highlight of which was his contribution to Benzema's second goal with an exquisite reverse pass.

Thibaut Courtois, at 29 among the best goalkeepers on the planet, prevented Mbappe from scoring at least twice more.

Real Madrid, though, still lack the mobility and dynamism of Bayern and the Premier League's leading lights. Saving up for Mbappe for the last three years has seen to that.

And while Ancelotti is an expert man manager, he is not a visionary coach in the mold of Pep Guardiola, Jurgen Klopp or Julian Nagelsmann, all of whom are currently at the forefront of the game's tactical thinking.

Yet Real Madrid remain alive. They came back to beat PSG with the old instincts kicking in and the fans singing at the end: "This is how we win." It was hard to disagree.



Man City Rising After Win over Chelsea While Liverpool Stays 6 Points Clear

Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City in action during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Chelsea, in Manchester, Britain, 25 January 2025.  EPA/TIM KEETON
Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City in action during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Chelsea, in Manchester, Britain, 25 January 2025. EPA/TIM KEETON
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Man City Rising After Win over Chelsea While Liverpool Stays 6 Points Clear

Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City in action during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Chelsea, in Manchester, Britain, 25 January 2025.  EPA/TIM KEETON
Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City in action during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Chelsea, in Manchester, Britain, 25 January 2025. EPA/TIM KEETON

Manchester City's Premier League revival gathered pace after beating Chelsea 3-1 moved Pep Guardiola's team up to fourth in the standings on Saturday.
The four-time defending champion remains 12 points behind leader Liverpool, but its unbeaten run in the league extended to six games after a stunning run of defeats at the end of last year.
Still, City had to come from behind at Etihad Stadium after a mistake from debutant Abdukodir Khusanov allowed Chelsea to go ahead inside three minutes, The Associated Press reported.
“Three points. We needed it," Guardiola said after City fought back through goals by Josko Gvardiol, Erling Haaland and Phil Foden. “Emotionally, they come back incredibly well.”
Liverpool kept up its charge towards the title by thrashing Ipswich 4-1 and staying six points clear.
Arsenal was second after winning at Wolverhampton 1-0, but third-placed Nottingham Forest was stunned by Bournemouth 5-0 on the south coast.
Fifth-placed Newcastle came back from a goal down to beat Southampton 3-1, with Alexander Isak scoring twice.
A record-extending fifth title looks beyond City but there are positive signs for Guardiola after the midseason collapse.
One win in 13 games, including nine losses from October to December, plunged City down the table in the league and the Champions League.
But victory against Chelsea lifted City back into the top four, even after a woeful start when Khusanov's weak header allowed Noni Madueke to open the scoring.
Gvardiol equalized shortly before halftime then an error from Chelsea goalkeeper Robert Sanchez — his league-leading fifth error this season leading to a goal — proved decisive in the 68th when he needlessly raced off his line and allowed Erling Haaland to fire City ahead.
“He is completely aware that he has to do better,” Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca said of Sanchez.
Foden completed City's comeback when bursting through late on, scoring in a fourth straight league game for the first time.
Chelsea looked capable of mounting a title challenge some weeks ago but a run of one win in seven has seen it drop to sixth.
Guardiola will have to hope another morale-boosting performance sets his team up well for the decisive Champions League game against Brugge on Wednesday, with City on the brink of elimination.
Liverpool coach Arne Slot called their latest win “almost a perfect performance” for 85 minutes.
Mohamed Salah scored his 100th league goal at Anfield and his 23rd overall this season.
Relegation-fighting Ipswich lost to Man City 6-0 last weekend and couldn’t cope with the power of the league leader either.
Dominik Szoboszlai opened the scoring and Salah doubled the lead in the 35th. Cody Gakpo scored in the 44th and 66th, his first league brace in nearly two years.
Jacob Greaves pulled one back late for Ipswich.
After blowing a two-goal lead against Aston Villa last week, Arsenal looked in danger of dropping more points at Wolverhampton when Myles Lewis-Skelly was sent off in the first half while the game was scoreless.
Wolves couldn’t take advantage of the extra man and were reduced to 10 when Joao Gomes was red-carded in the 70th.
It took four minutes for Arsenal to capitalize, with Riccardo Calafiori hitting the winner with left-footed volley from inside the box.
“We’re not going to give up on the title race," Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said. "We’re going to face any challenge, any situation like we have done today. Whether we win or not, that is a different question. We are going to try 100%, I guarantee we are going to be there."
Forest stunned Forest has been one of the surprise stories of the league but Bournemouth has quietly been putting together an impressive run of its own.
Still, few would have expected such a spectacular result at Vitality Stadium.
Dango Ouattara struck a second-half hat trick for Bournemouth in the 55th, 61st and 87th. Justin Kluivert and Antoine Semenyo were also on target, and US international Tyler Adams provided two assists.
Bournemouth is unbeaten in 12 games in all competitions and plays Liverpool at home next week.
Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santos, on his 51st birthday, was stunned by the result.
“We have to realize the things we did well until now, we have to do it,” he told the BBC. “When we don't do those things we are a very fragile team.”
Isak scores again Isak took his season tally to 19 goals as Newcastle bounced back from last week’s 4-1 defeat to Bournemouth.
Southampton, Newcastle went behind to Jan Bednarek’s goal in the 10th. Isak leveled from the penalty spot in the 26th and got his second four minutes later.
Sandro Tonali scored Newcastle’s third after the break.
Moyes magic David Moyes has made a quick impact at Everton after overseeing his second win in three games since returning as manager, and climbing seven points away from the relegation places.
Iliman Ndiaye’s penalty secured a 1-0 win at Brighton, which followed a victory against Tottenham last week.
Everton won only three times in the league under former manager Sean Dyche before Moyes was hired this month, returning to the club he led from 2002-13.
“I have got to say Dychey left an awful lot of good things at this football club,” Moyes said. “Resilience, being hard to beat, tough, they had all that. We are now just trying to add a little bit more.”