Real Madrid close gap to Barcelona with win over Alavés

Real Madrid moved within six points of La Liga leaders Barcelona on 21 April after a convincing home victory over Alavés at the Santiago Bernabéu. Goals from Kylian Mbappé and Vinícius Júnior secured the win, keeping Madrid's title hopes alive with five rounds of the season remaining. The result extended Madrid's unbeaten run to eight matches across all competitions as Carlo Ancelotti's side builds momentum at the business end of the campaign.
The win means Barcelona, who face third-placed Atlético Madrid this weekend, cannot afford further slip-ups if they are to retain their advantage at the summit. Madrid, meanwhile, have now won their last four consecutive league fixtures, a sequence that has placed genuine pressure on a Barcelona side that looked commanding just six weeks ago. The title race is not decided, but the trajectory has shifted in Madrid's favour.
Mbappé opened the scoring midway through the first half, converting from close range after a low cross from the right flank caused chaos in the Alavés penalty area. The French forward's movement off the shoulder of the last defender has been a persistent feature of Madrid's recent attacking patterns, and on this occasion it yielded a goal his season record suggested was coming. Vinícius Júnior doubled the lead shortly after the interval, finishing coolly after a swift counter-attacking move left Alavés exposed in transition. The Brazilian's goal brought up his twentieth league goal of the season, a milestone that underlines his growing status as one of European football's most decisive attackers.
Alavés, battling to avoid relegation, offered little in response. Their manager had spoken before the match of targeting points in this fixture as part of a survival strategy built on accumulating against sides above them in the table. The performance did not reflect that ambition. They created one clear chance in the opening half, which was saved by Thibaut Courtois, and thereafter appeared to accept their fate against a Madrid side demonstrating increasing fluency in the final third. The defeat leaves them three points above the relegation zone with five matches to play.
The context for this result matters as much as the result itself. Barcelona have been widely praised for the consistency they have shown this season, with Hansi Flick's tactical setup yielding a defensive record that has kept most opponents at arm's length. Yet the gap, once ten points, has now been halved. Madrid's recruitment last summer — Mbappé arrived from Paris Saint-Germain, and the supporting cast around him has grown more comfortable in their roles — has given them the kind of forward depth that allows them to sustain a title push even when resting key players. Ancelotti made three changes to his starting eleven from the Champions League exit against Arsenal in mid-week, a signal that squad management remains central to his approach across competitions.
The remaining fixtures present distinct challenges. Barcelona's visit to Atlético on Saturday carries significant weight; a home win would restore the gap to nine points and effectively settle the title. Should Atlético take points from the leaders, however, Madrid will smell an opportunity. Their own run-in includes a trip to Valencia and a home fixture against a Vallecano side that has caused problems for top-four sides this season. Whether Mbappé, Vinícius, and the midfield axis around Federico Valverde can sustain the required output over those five matches will determine whether this victory becomes the inflection point of the season or merely a footnote in a Barcelona coronation.
Real Madrid's win keeps the Spanish title race alive with five rounds to play. The six-point gap to Barcelona is the smallest it has been since round 20 of the season. Nothing is decided, but the momentum has shifted.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/ MehrNews