In one of the most chaotic and thrilling El Clasicos in recent memory, Barcelona overturned a two-goal deficit with a first-half blitz to defeat Real Madrid 4-3 at Montjuic. Kylian Mbappe's hat-trick wasn’t enough as a stunning attacking display by Flick’s side brought them within touching distance of La Liga glory.
The Montjuïc night sky pulsed with tension, history, and unfiltered adrenaline. When Real Madrid roared into a two-goal lead inside 15 minutes both from Kylian Mbappé, the first from the spot and the second a silky curler Barcelona fans feared another chapter of heartbreak.
But then the storm began.
Eric Garcia’s scrappy tap-in lit the fuse. Lamine Yamal, still a teenager but already a Clasico veteran in composure, curled in a jaw-dropper to level it. Seconds later, Raphinha struck. Then again. Four goals in 18 minutes flipped the match and the season on its head.
Real Madrid, stunned, regrouped. The second half was a rollercoaster of chances, disallowed goals, and raw nerves. Mbappé completed his hat-trick to close the gap to one. Twice Madrid thought they had equalized—once ruled offside, another flagged for handball. Barcelona weren’t immune either; López’s brilliant late goal was chalked off in stoppage time.
By the end, fans were breathless, voices hoarse, limbs aching from tension. A 4-3 final that felt more like 7-7 in intensity, and one that put Barcelona within inches of lifting the LaLiga trophy. Flick’s side now turn to the derby against Espanyol, while Madrid are left with regrets and the wreckage of a title slipping away.
It wasn’t just a game. It was El Clasico at its unrelenting, emotional peak forever etched into Catalan lore.