The UEFA Champions League knockout playoff round wrapped up this week with high drama ahead of Friday’s last-16 draw. Wednesday’s action delivered 17 goals and three red cards across four matches, including Galatasaray’s extra-time triumph over Juventus, Borussia Dortmund’s collapse from a two-goal lead against Atalanta, and Benfica’s near-upset at Real Madrid before a 3-1 aggregate defeat. On Tuesday, Bodø/Glimt advanced 5-2 on aggregate past Inter Milan, while Atlético Madrid and Newcastle United cruised past Club Brugge and FK Qarabag.
Real Madrid’s Unconvincing Advance: Champions or Frail?
Real Madrid secured a 3-1 aggregate win over Jose Mourinho’s Benfica but lacked dominance. Football analyst Gab Marcotti highlights the team’s reliance on goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois and striker Kylian Mbappé: “Real Madrid can win the Champions League because they have a shutdown keeper in Courtois and a consummate goal-scorer in Mbappé.” He notes that a defensive setup waiting for star moments can succeed despite unconvincing displays.
Julien Laurens counters that this squad and manager fall short: “I really don’t believe this version of Real Madrid can win the competition this season.” Despite elite talents like Courtois, Mbappé, and Vinícius Júnior, the structure remains flawed, lacking full-game control essential for UCL glory.
Sam Tighe points to poor performances like the 2-1 home win over Benfica, marked by turnovers and Benfica threats, warning that top-four league-phase teams could expose them. Mark Ogden sees midfield vulnerabilities but notes no dominant rival exists, with lethal forwards like Mbappé, Vinícius, and Jude Bellingham capable of clutch goals backed by Courtois.
PSG Edges Monaco: Back-to-Back Title Realistic?
Defending champions Paris Saint-Germain survived a 5-4 aggregate thriller against AS Monaco. Laurens doubts a repeat, citing rarity—only AC Milan and Real Madrid achieved it since the late 1980s: “This PSG squad reached their heavenly peak last season… they won’t go through this again.” Fatigue from a prolonged Club World Cup run weighs heavy.
Marcotti remains optimistic, noting just six losses this season (four to French sides now eliminated) and added experience in a young squad, despite a goalkeeper downgrade. Ogden observed a flat PSG in Paris, with a quiet Parc des Princes atmosphere signaling exhaustion; he predicts struggles against Barcelona and even odds versus Chelsea.
Tighe laments the drop-off from last season’s dominance, blaming injuries and goalkeeper issues, questioning sustained elite form.
Bodø/Glimt’s Fairytale: How Far Can Norway’s Heroes Go?
Bodø/Glimt captivates as the 2025-26 UCL story, surpassing Norwegian records with wins over Atlético Madrid, Manchester City, and Inter (twice). Ogden predicts success against Sporting CP but not City over two legs, praising their organization and coaching. “Every team outside the big leagues can take inspiration from Bodø,” he adds.
Laurens agrees Sporting leads to quarters, but City ends the run, marveling at their late surge despite no league-phase wins. Marcotti calls them high-risk, high-reward: energetic, resilient, aided by their plastic pitch and Arctic home. Tighe spotlights “misfit” stars like Jens Petter Hauge and Kasper Høgh, thriving with something to prove.
Italian Football in Turmoil: Juve, Inter Out Early
Juventus fell to Galatasaray, Inter to Bodø/Glimt, Atalanta barely beat Dortmund, and Napoli missed knockouts. With Italy’s national team facing World Cup playoffs, concerns mount. Laurens blasts Serie A’s low intensity, most 0-0 draws among top leagues, and reliance on veterans like Luka Modrić.
Tighe notes circumstantial factors like Inter’s bad luck (high xG despite losses) and Napoli injuries. Ogden decries frozen progress: poor stadium investment, talent drain, internal trading. Since Inter’s 2010 UCL win, Italy claims just two minor trophies. Marcotti defends recent finals parity with Premier League but admits gaps versus super-clubs, urging nuance—Atalanta ousted Bundesliga runners-up Dortmund shorthanded.
Dream Round-of-16 Draws Ahead
Marcotti favors Newcastle United vs. Barcelona for stylistic clash or Bayern Munich vs. Bayer Leverkusen. Laurens craves blockbusters: Atlético vs. Liverpool, City vs. Madrid, PSG vs. Chelsea, Leverkusen vs. Bayern. Ogden echoes heavyweight clashes, intrigued by PSG’s next foe. Tighe seeks cross-nation battles, avoiding domestics, ideally PSG-Barcelona.

