blancos
Real Madrid and Ancelotti make European history – Los Blancos win 35th Spanish league titleblancos
Real Madridwon their 35th Spanish league title on Saturday when they comfortably dispatchedEspanyol with a 4-0victory, following a first-half brace fromRodrygo and two more fromMarco AsensioandKarim Benzema in the second half. Madrid managerCarlo Ancelotti also made history as the first head coach in the modern era to win a league title in each of European football’s top five leagues, having previously won the league in Italy, England, Germany, France and now with Los Blancos in Spain.
Club Comparison Real Madrid
RCD Espanyol Barcelona
LaLiga LaLiga €843.50m Market Value €120.85m
First Tier League Level First Tier
€80.00m Expenditures 22/23 €2.50m
Carlo Ancelotti Managers Diego Martínez
Full Club Comparison
With a second legChampions League semi-final againstManchester City to keep one eye on in midweek, Ancelotti made some notable changes to his starting XI by dropping Karim Benzema, Dani Carvajal, Toni Kroos, Ferland Mendy, Federico Valverde andVinicius Jr following their 3-2 defeat in the first leg in England.
Stats Vinicius Junior Left Winger
Real Madrid Season 21/22–
LaLiga Games 35 Goals 17 Assists 13
However, the capital side’s reserves proved to be more than a match for Espanyol. Rodrygo opened the scoring for Ancelotti’s side in the 33rd minute, when the forward was played through and showed excellent composure to tuck the ball into the bottom right corner. The Brazilian then doubled his and his side’s tally 11 minutes later when he capitalised on a mistake in defence to roll the ball into the back of the net.
Market Value T. Kroos Central Midfield €20.00m
Two more came in the second half to secure all three points and the league title for Madrid, when Asensio tapped home a short-range finish in the penalty box just 11 minutes into the second half, after Eduardo Camavinga set up the Spaniard with an impressive counter attack. Then, to top off the night, Benzema made a late appearance to bag a goal for himself, when he latched on to a pass and fired a first-time shot into the bottom left corner 10 minutes from time.
Staff C. Ancelotti Age: 63
Real Madrid Season 21/22 –
Primera División Games 38 Won 26 Draw 8 Lost 4
Ancelotti’s march to a fifth league title – in his fifth European nation
Ancelotti won his first league title when he became manager of AC Milan in 2001, when the Italian giants picked up the Serie A title in 2004, in a successful managerial stint which saw the club win two Champions League titles as well as the Italian Cup. His next league title came six years later, when Ancelotti took over at Chelsea for just two years but still managed to claim the Premier League title and the FA Cup.
Carlo Ancelotti has now become the first manager to win a league title in each of Europe's top five leagues pic.twitter.com/ukI4Iu7pN1
— Transfermarkt.co.uk (@TMuk_news) April 30, 2022
The Italian manager’s next league title came in France, when Ancelotti swapped London for Paris and enjoyed a two-year stint at Paris Saint-Germain, which produced a single Ligue 1 title in the 2012/13 season. The Italian tactician was then tempted to Spain, but his first stint at Real Madrid failed to produce a league title, despite claiming a Spanish Cup and Champions League along the way.
Benzema climbs to fifth place: Most goals in a Champions League season 16 Raúl – Real Madrid – 99/00 – 10 goals (in 15 games) ©imago images
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16 Ruud van Nistelrooy – Manchester United – 01/02 – 10 goals (in 14 games) ©imago images
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16 Filippo Inzaghi – AC Milan – 02/03 – 10 goals (in 14 games) ©imago images
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16 Rivaldo – Barcelona – 99/00 – 10 goals (in 14 games) ©imago images
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16 Lionel Messi – Barcelona – 14/15 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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16 Kaká – AC Milan – 06/07 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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16 Robert Lewandowski – Borussia Dortmund – 12/13 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©Getty Images
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16 Mohamed Salah – Liverpool – 17/18 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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16 Roberto Firmino – Liverpool – 17/18 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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16 Jardel – Porto – 99/00 – 10 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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16 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 14/15 – 10 goals (in 12 games) ©imago images
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16 Neymar – Barcelona – 14/15 – 10 goals (in 12 games) ©TM/imago images
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16 Sadio Mané – Liverpool – 17/18 – 10 goals (in 11 games) ©imago images
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16 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 11/12 – 10 goals (in 10 games) ©imago images
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16 Alessandro Del Piero – Juventus – 97/98 – 10 goals (in 10 games) ©imago images
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16 Erling Haaland – Borussia Dortmund – 10 goals (in 8 games) ©imago images
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16 Zlatan Ibrahimovic – PSG – 13/14 – 10 goals (in 8 games) ©Getty Images
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16 Erling Haaland – Borussia Dortmund/Salzburg – 19/20 – 10 goals (in 8 games) ©imago images
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14 Lionel Messi – Barcelona – 16/17 – 11 goals (in 9 games) ©imago images
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14 Sébastien Haller – Ajax – 21/22 – 11 goals (in 8 games) ©imago images
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8 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 16/17 – 12 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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8 Lionel Messi – Barcelona – 10/11 – 12 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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8 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 12/13 – 12 goals (in 12 games) ©Getty Images
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8 Mario Gómez – Bayern Munich – 11/12 – 12 goals (in 12 games) ©imago images
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8 Lionel Messi – Barcelona – 18/19 – 12 goals (in 10 games) ©imago images
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8 Ruud van Nistelrooy – Manchester United – 02/03 – 12 goals (in 9 games) ©imago images
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7 Robert Lewandowski – Bayern Munich – 21/22 – 13 goals (in 10 games) ©imago images
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5 Lionel Messi – Barcelona – 11/12 – 14 goals (in 11 games) ©imago images
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3 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 17/18 – 15 goals (in 13 games) ©imago images
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3 Robert Lewandowski – Bayern Munich – 19/20 – 15 goals (in 10 games) ©imago images
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3 Karim Benzema – Real Madrid – 21/22 – 15 goals (after 11 games so far) ©imago images
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2 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 15/16 – 16 goals (in 12 games) ©imago images
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1 Cristiano Ronaldo – Real Madrid – 13/14 – 17 goals (in 11 games) ©Getty Images
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Following Los Blancos, Ancelotti then made the move to Germany, when he took over from Pep Guardiola at Bayern Munich and duly won the 2016/17 Bundesliga title with relative ease, alongside two German Super Cups. However, like his time in London, Ancelotti didn’t stick around too long in Bavaria and left after just a year.
Ancelotti’s honours Every trophy won by the Italian manager
What followed was three years of relatively little success, where Ancelotti spent a season at Napoli and then at Everton, where it seemed as though his lust for league titles had finally met its match. However, following Zidane’s departure from Madrid in the summer of 2021, the Italian coach jumped at the chance to return to Spain for the one league title that had evaded him the first time. And now Ancelotti has finally been able to claim a fifth league title in as many countries.