Takeaways: Clinical Atlético grind out first-leg win at Barcelona

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Atletico Madrid's Argentine forward #19 Julian Alvarez celebrates scoring his team's first goal with Atletico Madrid's French forward #07 Antoine Griezmann during the UEFA Champions League quarter final first leg football match between FC Barcelona and Club Atletico de Madrid at Camp Nou Stadium in Barcelona on April 8, 2026. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images

Many different storylines dominated the days that led up to kickoff from Nou Camp Nou on Wednesday night. Barcelona’s unwavering tampering with Julián Alvarez’s future as an Atlético de Madrid player was only one of the many issues that fans discussed in the build-up to this all-Spanish quarterfinal.

But Julián made sure to change that narrative after his glorious free kick led Atleti to a 2-0 win at the Nou Camp Nou.

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Despite the many injuries, Atleti have been surprisingly competitive in recent weeks, when a next-man-up attitude has taken over. Five players, mostly starters, were missing from Atleti’s squad on Wednesday night; another starter in defense was injured during the first half.

Simeone definitely had decided to give Antoine Griezmann one last dance on the biggest of stages: the stadium of his former team in the UEFA Champions League. The press conference prior to the match was a real tear-jerker. It felt as if Diego Pablo’s kid was Antoine, rather than Giuliano. The “dare to dream” statements were bold. “Five games more” in the Champions League. Make it big or die trying. Griezmann deserves this last dance, and Simeone is going to do everything in his hands to make it memorable.

With one last act to come in this Barcelona trilogy, Atleti is just one game away from pulling off their second huge upset of Barça in as many months. Catalan fans seem to have had enough of the rojiblancos, and some of the rowdiest ones have turned Atleti visits into minor acts of street warfare that local police should make sure to fix for the future. Atleti’s bus was stoned on its way to Barça’s stadium for the second game there in a row in less than a month.

Let’s get into some more takeaways from a seriously-impressive night in Barcelona.

Julián scores a legendary goal

Barcelona-Atlético matches are highly unpredictable. Anything can happen at any given moment. And this time, the coin fell on Atleti’s side.

In a first half where Barcelona seemed to be in control, Atleti got an advantage that might define the tie. Giuliano forced Pau Cubarsí to foul him on the edge of the box in one of the only dangerous attacking sequences Atleti had been able to string together after the first 15 minutes or so

Julián punched Barcelona in the teeth with a clinical shot into Joan García’s left corner and gave a huge advantage to the rojiblancos on the verge of halftime. Marc Pubill and Robin Le Normand created a visual obstacle for García for just enough time to make the goalkeeper hesitate.

(Unfortunately, right after Atleti’s goal, Robert Lewandowski forced Marc Pubill into a yellow card when the ball wasn’t even close to either player.)

At halftime, what counted was despite the Marcus Rashford-Lamine Yamal nightmare duo, Atleti was on top.

Despite being one man down, Barcelona still found avenues to play direct football and take advantage of Rashford’s powerful stride. Gavi and Fermín came on for Pedri and Lewandowski in what seemed an attempt from Hansi Flick to stop the defensive bleeding and make it alive to the second leg. Le Normand fouled Lamine in a very similar position to the one from where Álvarez scored. But Rashford’s attempt only glanced the crossbar, in an indication that luck perhaps would be on Atleti’s side — even with a feeling taking hold that the visitors weren’t taking advantage of the red card.

Barca fans taunted Atleti with “rag-tag army” chants (“es una banda, Atleti es una banda”). The 3,000 atléticos at the Barça venue had some stepping up to do to counter the atmosphere and they became much more vocal as the game progressed. Lamine and Rashford felt that teaming up on Barça’s right side was their best option and they were not wrong as they continued to pound Atleti’s left back for most of the second half. Matteo Ruggeri, unable to deal with both of them following Dávid Hancko’s injury, conceded a corner that was almost slotted in by Jules Koundé and Dani Olmo. Neither made it to the ball only by inches.

One hour in, Barcelona had attempted four times as many shots (16 to 4). It felt like Atleti were walking a tightrope. But Alvarez’s incredible strike, his ninth goal in this season’s Champions League, held up.

Musso collects more than a clean sheet

“In Jan we trust” has been the mantra for 12 seasons. No one has been able to dethrone Oblak as GK1. But Juan Musso is taking huge steps to become a more-than-worthy successor for Oblak the Great once he moves on from Atlético.

Only three months and eight days into 2026, Musso has accumulated the same nine games he played in all of 2025. Is this the beginning of a new reign? Time will tell, but pulling off a Champions League clean sheet away to Barcelona is quite the feat. 

Musso was drawn into action quickly as he saved from Rashford inside 90 seconds. The tempo was furious, an electric game with both teams slugging it out, a constant high tempo in place back and forth. Barcelona’s wings presented Musso with constant danger. On the right, Lamine Yamal’s high-speed dribbling. On the left, the Rashford-João Cancelo duo had Nahuel Molina on skates more often than not.

An 18th-minute disallowed goal for Rashford was as close as Barça came to beating Musso, who later touched a Rashford free kick off the crossbar. It exposed Atleti’s high-risk, high-reward game plan that made it easier to counterattack and find offensive opportunities for Griezmann, Giuliano, Lookman and Julián in a fluid front four where only Lookman seemed to stay fixed to his position.

Hancko’s KO is a painful one

With Oblak, Pubill, Pablo Barrios and Johnny Cardoso still on their way back from injury, another injury to a key player is not at all what Diego Simeone needed.

On 31 minutes, Hancko felt a sharp pain in his left ankle while jumping for a header. Pubill was rushed back into the side despite the initial plan being to ease him back into action and try not to expose him in the first leg. After the match, Hancko was seen on crutches; the club has only said he suffered an ankle twist.

Atleti felt the pain of the defensive readjustment on both wings. Pubill took Le Normand’s right center back position while Le Normand switched sides. But despite the demanding match, Molina, Ruggeri and Le Normand can feel happy with their performances in a high-stakes game. That should give each player confidence that they can hold the line while Hancko is out — however long that is.

Sørloth strikes Barça again

Alexander Sørloth and Alex Baena were sent onto the pitch for Lookman and Koke in an attempt to stretch the field in Atleti’s favor and keep the ball farther from Musso. Baena conceded a very early yellow card by holding onto Olmo’s sleeve; ironically, he had just been sent on for Koke to avoid picking up a second yellow card.

But after a few minutes on the pitch, Simeone’s substitutions proved to be gelling well and finding their footing. Ruggeri, in a great performance despite suffering so much with Lamine Yamal all night, was able to get a good pass in and crossed the ball perfectly so Sørloth could do what he does best: dominate with a final touch.

Barcelona, down two, still trusted the process and brought the pressure on, making it a nightmare for Atleti to get the ball past midfield again. There were times where Atleti seemed one trip or slip away from granting Barça the edge they needed to get a goal. Cancelo, always the threat, kept creating chances for himself and feeding Lamine inside the box. After losing a very dangerous ball, Giuliano was subbed out by his dad along with Griezmann to bring on fresher legs. Almada and Nico were sent on with the mission to secure Simeone’s first win at Camp Nou (and Atleti’s first there since 2006), even though Cholo did come away with a Montjuïc win last season in La Liga. 

The players were able to finally celebrate the hard-fought win and now take a two-goal advantage to the Metropolitano stronghold where Atleti traditionally has shown its best version. Atleti has not lost a knockout tie match as a home team in European competition since 1997. The 2016 dagger to the heart of Barcelona fans is closer than ever.

Atleti collected all the minor stat defeats imaginable — time of possession, challenges won, attempts on target, successful passes, fouls, yellow cards, offsides, corner kicks conceded. Except for the two that mattered the most. Atleti did not get a red card and they scored twice while Barcelona remained scoreless all night and face a second consecutive elimination by that rival that they tend to downplay and not take as seriously as they should.

The sense of mild disappointment present in the first post-match interviews that Atleti players had is a refreshing sense of accountability that the team is putting on its shoulders. The feeling of “we can and will do better in future games” is a great way to remain focused for what lies ahead. For those few in doubt, Atleti are all-in in the Champions League and as Simeone says, they are hoping to “give Griezmann five games more.”

Older fans will reminisce how the 2013/14 and 2015/16 teams were also able to beat the odds and make a deep run that deserved to have been rewarded with a Champions League title. In Spanish, they say “a la tercera va la vencida.”

Third time’s a charm. 

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