A depleted Real Madrid side staged a dramatic late comeback to edge Mallorca 2-1 at the Bernabeu, keeping the La Liga title race alive for another day. In a match dominated by missed chances and a heroic goalkeeping display, it was academy player Jacobo Ramon who emerged the unlikely hero with a stoppage-time winner.
The Bernabeu has seen its fair share of drama over the years, but few nights have unfolded quite like this. A Real Madrid side ravaged by injuries, with just one senior player on the bench, refused to surrender their La Liga crown without a fight — and with virtually the final kick of the game, Jacobo Ramon etched his name into club folklore.
Carlo Ancelotti’s men knew anything but a win would hand Barcelona the title, and despite battering Mallorca with 39 shots, 26 corners, and a staggering xG of 2.56, the scoreboard stubbornly refused to tilt their way for much of the evening.
Incredibly, it was the visitors who struck first, as Martin Valjent curled a fine effort past Thibaut Courtois in the 11th minute Mallorca’s only shot of the first half. From there, it was the Roman show. The visiting goalkeeper delivered an inspired performance, pulling off a string of outstanding saves to frustrate Madrid’s attackers.
The tension inside the Bernabeu mounted as chance after chance went begging. Kylian Mbappé, chasing a Pichichi title of his own, finally made the breakthrough in the 68th minute, rifling a low drive beyond Roman for his 40th goal of a sensational debut campaign.
As the minutes ticked away and hope seemed to fade, it was Ramon without a goal to his name who produced a moment of pure magic. Deep into stoppage time, Jesus Vallejo’s header found the young midfielder, who hooked a shot over Roman to spark wild celebrations in Madrid and silence from Barcelona, whose title party was postponed for at least another day.
It was a bittersweet night for Mallorca, whose hopes of European football suffered a blow, while Ancelotti, in his final weeks as Real boss, keeps his swansong season alive in the most dramatic of fashions.
Real’s title hopes may still be hanging by a thread, but nights like this remind you why football remains the most unpredictable and beautiful of sports.