Real Madrid hoping Champions League magic halts Bayern juggernaut
Real Madrid's Brazilian forward #07 Vinicius Junior reacts during the Spanish league football match between Real Madrid CF and Club Atletico de Madrid at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium in Madrid on March 22, 2026. (Photo by Oscar DEL POZO / AFP)
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Vincent Kompany's Bayern Munich visit Real Madrid on Tuesday
in the Champions League quarter-finals high on confidence and looking like
Europe's most complete side, bolstered by the likely return of superstar
striker Harry Kane.
Record 15-time winners Madrid have endured a difficult
season, plagued by inconsistency, but have made a habit of pulling off the unexpected
in this competition.
Just as it seemed their well of Champions League magic was
running dry, Madrid produced their best performance of the season to crush Pep
Guardiola's Manchester City in the last 16.
Despite Madrid's prestige and troupe of attacking stars -
Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior, and Jude Bellingham included, as well as City
hat-trick hero Federico Valverde - Bayern are arguably favourites to lift the
trophy.
"It would be presumptuous to assume that we'll
definitely advance," said honorary Bayern president Uli Hoeness. "But
we haven't had such great chances in terms of the playing quality as we have
this year in a long time."
Kane, who has scored 48 goals in 40 appearances across all
competitions this season, missed Bayern's battling 3-2 Bundesliga win at
Freiburg on Saturday with an ankle issue.
"He'd play in a wheelchair," said Bayern
midfielder Joshua Kimmich, while Kompany added that he had "a
feeling" that the England striker would be ready.
With Michael Olise and Luis Diaz joining Kane in attack,
Kompany's side play an aggressive, high-pressing style which helped them
demolish Atalanta in the last 16, 10-2 on aggregate.
Bayern came from two goals down to beat Freiburg and
match-winner Lennart Karl said that fighting spirit was crucial heading into
the Madrid clash.
"It gives us a lot of confidence. It was very important
-- we actually feel unbeatable at the moment," he said, with Bayern's last
defeat coming in January, 14 matches ago.
In that same period Madrid have lost four times, with coach
Alvaro Arbeloa struggling to find the right balance when all his superstars are
fit, just like Xabi Alonso and Carlo Ancelotti before him.
"They're not playing the best football, but they're
outstanding in terms of experience," noted Hoeness.
Madrid fell to a disappointing defeat at Mallorca in La Liga
on Saturday, leaving them seven points behind rivals Barcelona in the Spanish
title race.
Arbeloa brushed off the loss and said it would have no
bearing on his team's performance against Bayern, in the club's favoured
competition.
"I know what my players are capable of, I know they
understand the importance of Tuesday's game," Arbeloa told reporters.
"The demand on the team will be maximum and I know the
support that Madrid fans will offer us -- with them, everything is
easier."
Bayern are well aware of the impact of Madrid's supporters
on big European nights at the Bernabeu, which, along with the weight of history
and sublime individual quality, helps Los Blancos pull off remarkable results
even when the odds are against them.
"It's the stadium and the fans who, together with the
team, transform into a hurricane that sweeps over the opponent," said
Bayern powerbroker Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.
"You need nerves of steel, you have to stay calm, and
you have to be mentally prepared... it's not just an ordinary game. It will be
the toughest test."
Two Bayern players who understand that more than most are
goalkeepers Manuel Neuer and Sven Ulreich, who have both cracked in the
Bernabeu pressure cooker before.
In the 2018 semi-final Ulreich went to pick up a back pass
before suddenly realising his mistake and let it run past him, with Karim Benzema
tapping into the empty net.
Madrid went on to win that tie, as they have on all of the
last four knockouts against Bayern. In each of those years, they went on to
lift the trophy.
In the 2024 semi-finals former Stoke City striker Joselu
struck twice in the dying embers of the second leg, the first after a Neuer
handling error, to send Bayern crashing out.
No teams have faced each other more in the competition, with
Tuesday's match the 29th occasion Madrid will meet Bayern.
The German giants last eliminated Los Blancos in 2012 but
believe they finally have the quality this year to rewrite the narrative of the
last decade.

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