CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

How many times have Manchester City and Real Madrid faced each other in the Champions League and who won more?

The two big favorites meet at the quarter final stage, serving up a treat of a contest, and it’s not the first time they’ve met over the years.

JAVIER SORIANOAFP

The current champions face the club who have dominated this tournament since its inception. Manchester City secured their first title after beating Inter Milan by the minimum in Istanbul last year. They go into battle with Real Madrid, the club which holds practically every record in Europe’s top club competition - the most games, the most goals, the most appearances in the final and the most titles - 14.

Carlo Ancelotti meanwhile is the coach to have overseen the most games (201) and with the most wins (114) ahead of Sir Alex Ferguson (190 and 102) and Arsène Wenger (178 and 82).

City started out as favorites for UCL

Pep Guardiola’s City at +175 remained firm favorites with the bookmakers, who had Madrid at +650 - what’s certain is that one of them will fall by the wayside, leaving the winners a clear run at the title. Both teams headed into the quarter final in contrasting situations in their respective leagues - City are immersed in a tight, three-horse race with Arsenal and Liverpool in the Premier League while Madrid are coasting at the top of LaLiga. And they served up a tasty 3-3 first leg encounter at the Santiago Bernabéu.

The Spanish giants have made 43 appearances in this competition compared to City’s 15; and while for the Mancunians, this quarter final tie brought up their 128th and 129th games in the tournament, Madrid are inching towards the 500 mark - they will be just 14 games off that magical figure when this tie is over.

The comparisons stop short there. For all their European pedigree, Madrid would probably have preferred any other rival other than City. Still fresh in the memory is last season’s semi-final when Guardiola’s team fired four past them at the Etihad, to book their place in the final - serving the Spanish giants one of their heaviest defeats in European competition.

In total, Madrid and City have now met 12 times in the Champions League - all but one of those were in the later knockout rounds. Let’s reflect back on those that came before this year.

Shaun BotterillGetty Images

2012/13: Group stage

Real Madrid’s first encounter with Manchester City was in the group stage of the 2012/13 tournament. They landed in Group D along with Borussia Dortmund and Ajax. A baptism of fire for the English club, who were making just their third appearance in the European Cup/Champions League and had to visit the imposing Bernabéu on matchday 1. The first 45 minutes ended in stalemate then Edin Dzeko fired the visitors ahead with 20 minutes left. That opening goal transformed the game - Marcelo responded for Madrid, prompting an avalanche of goals in the last five minutes. Aleksandar Kolarov restored City’s lead with a precision free-kick but Mourinho’s team hit back with last-gasp strikes from Benzema and Cristiano Ronaldo to take the game 3-2.

The return fixture in Manchester on matchday 5 ended 1-1. Benzema got on the end of a Di María centre to slot in from close range with barely 10 minutes gone. The locals were back in it when Arbeloa hauled down David Silva inside the box on 72 minutes. The Madrid full-back was handed his marching orders and Kun Agüero tucked in the resulting spot-kick. With three draws and no wins, City bowed out bottom of the group while Dortmund and Madrid advanced.

2015/16: Semi-finals

The next meeting produced similarly close results but with the same outcome. City reached the semi-final, the furthest they had ever gone in the competition after seeing off Dynamo Kyiv then PSG in the knockout rounds. Madrid meanwhile had left Roma and Wolfsburg in their wake. The first leg in Manchester was a tense affair and unsurprisingly ended without goals.

The return was settled by a soft goal - Gareth Bale’s shot from a tight angle clipped Fernando, looped over Joe Hart and in off the stanchion. Both teams had a couple of chances to add to the scoreline but the ball wouldn’t go in and it ended 1-0, setting up an all-Madrid final in Milan.

2019/20: Round of 16

The tide finally turned for City in 2020 in a tie that was directly impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic. The first leg took place at the Bernabéu on 26 February - little over a fortnight later, Spain’s government declared a state of emergency, plunging the whole country into a lengthy lockdown. Seven years on from their first meeting, the gulf between the two teams had noticeably narrowed.

Isco, totally unmarked, slotted in to put Madrid ahead on the hour but City were soon back level. Gabriel Jesus nodded in a De Bruyne cross with a quarter of an hour to go and the Belgian had the final word from the penalty spot to make it 1-2 on the night.

The return leg was due to be played on 17 March but was postponed by UEFA due to rising Coronavirus cases and deaths. The game eventually took place behind closed doors on 7 August. Raheem Sterling increased City’s advantage on nine minutes, pouncing on a defensive mix-up and while Benzema pulled one back to give Madrid a fighting chance, it was all over when Gabriel Jesus was first to the ball after another calamitous blunder at the back to stroke in the winner.

2021/22: Semi-finals

City and Madrid were back at the stage two years later to produce one of the most pulsating semi-final ties in recent memory. Both had won their groups but Guardiola’s team, the reigning English champions, started out as favorites. Madrid on the other hand had muddled their way through the knockout rounds with a series of heroic comebacks against all the odds. Ancelotti’s team would pull out yet another miraculous turnaround to deny City a place in the final.

City stormed to a 3-1 lead in the first leg at the Etihad with goals from De Bruyne, Gabriel Jesus and Phil Foden but they let Madrid in contention after Vinicius clawed a goal back and Benzema converted a late penalty.

In the deciding leg, Mahrez was the first to find the net - his 73rd minute strike made the aggregate score 5-3, But astonishingly, Madrid defied the odds once again - Rodrygo scored twice within two minutes to level the tie on full-time and Benzema sent the Bernabéu into a state of frenzy by bagging a winner, five minutes into stoppage-time. It was one of the club’s greatest comebacks of all-time, drawing parallels with fabled clashes of years gone by when they bounced back to beat Derby County, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Inter Milan when all seemed lost.

2022/23: Semi-finals

Last year, City managed to get their revenge. They had learned their lesson: 90 minutes at the Bernabéu is a very, very long time and you can never write Madrid off until the final whistles blows. Once again, City were the bookies’ favorites and while the first leg in the Spanish capital ended 1-1, there was no contest in the return.

Bernardo Silva, Akanji and Julián Álvarez were on target to make it 4-0 on the night and 5-1 on aggregate. Pep’s team were on their way to the final for the second time in three years.

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