Spanish giants Real Madrid are facing the very real prospect of ending the season without silverware after a frustrating 1-1 draw against Girona in La Liga on Friday night.
The game, played under the lights at the Santiago Bernabéu, was meant to serve as a confidence booster ahead of their decisive second-leg clash against Bayern Munich in the UEFA Champions League. Instead, it has deepened concerns over a campaign that is quickly slipping out of control.
Madrid entered the contest knowing that victory was essential to keep pace with bitter rivals Barcelona in the title race. However, despite flashes of quality, they were once again unable to deliver when it mattered most.
After a relatively quiet first half, Federico Valverde injected life into the game just six minutes into the second period, giving Madrid the lead with a composed finish. The goal appeared to set the hosts on course for a routine victory, but Girona had other ideas. Just eleven minutes later, Thomas Lemar drew parity for the visitors, capitalizing on defensive hesitation to silence the Bernabéu crowd. From that point on, Madrid dominated possession and pushed relentlessly for a winner, but Girona’s defensive organization and discipline ensured they held on for a valuable point.

Despite boasting a star-studded attacking lineup featuring Kylian Mbappé, Vinícius Júnior and Jude Bellingham, Los Blancos lacked the cutting edge needed to secure all three points, with several half-chances going begging in the closing stages.
Frustration boiled over after the final whistle, with interim manager Álvaro Arbeloa directing his anger towards the use of VAR. The former Madrid defender was adamant his side should have been awarded a penalty following a challenge on Mbappé.
“The foul on Mbappé is a clear penalty. Here and on the moon, but this is where we are. Another week of the same things.”
Álvaro Arbeloa
He went further to question the consistency of video review decisions especially in relation to the penalty incident, stating that “Why did VAR not intervene? It comes in when it wants, and when it doesn’t, they look the other way.”
Season Hanging by a Thread

The draw has intensified fears that Madrid could finish the campaign empty-handed, a scenario almost unthinkable for a club of their stature. Already, they have missed out on the Spanish Super Cup after losing to rivals Barcelona in the final in Saudi Arabia and have crashed out of the Copa del Rey, leaving La Liga and the Champions League as their only remaining hopes.
Domestically, the situation looks increasingly bleak. Real Madrid now trail Barcelona by six points, a gap that could extend to nine depending on the outcome of their rivals’ derby clash against Espanyol on Saturday. More worrying than the points gap is the contrast in consistency. Barcelona have shown control and efficiency in grinding out results, while Madrid have repeatedly dropped points in matches they were expected to win including the defeat to relegation threatened Mallorca last weekend.
In Europe, the task is just as daunting. Los Blancos must overturn a 2-1 deficit against Bayern Munich away from home. Doing so will require not just attacking quality but defensive discipline, an area that has proven unreliable in recent weeks. Conceding in Germany would force them to chase the game further, exposing the same vulnerabilities Girona exploited.
History offers little comfort. The last time Madrid ended a season without a major trophy was in 2020-21 under Zinedine Zidane, a campaign that triggered significant changes within the squad and technical setup. A repeat could prompt another period of introspection, especially given the level of investment and talent currently at the club.

For a squad packed with elite names including Kylian Mbappé, Vinícius Júnior, Jude Bellingham, Antonio Rüdiger, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Thibaut Courtois, finishing without silverware would represent a major underachievement.
Unless there is a dramatic turnaround in both domestic and European competitions, Real Madrid’s season risks being defined not by triumph, but by missed opportunities and growing frustration.











