Barcelona came from behind to beat Atlético Madrid 3-1 at Camp Nou, delivering a resilient La Liga statement that keeps them clear at the top of the table. Goals from Raphinha, Dani Olmo and Ferran Torres overturned an early strike from Álex Baena and underlined Barcelona’s growing authority under coach Hansi Flick.
Comeback on a crucial night
Atlético silenced the home crowd midway through the first half when Baena broke Barcelona’s high line and finished a one-on-one chance, continuing Diego Simeone’s side’s habit of punishing defensive risks. Barcelona responded quickly as Pedri unlocked the visiting defence and Raphinha rounded Jan Oblak to level the match, shifting the momentum back towards the hosts before the break.
In the second half, Barcelona gradually took control of territory and possession, pressing higher and forcing Atlético deeper as the minutes passed. Flick’s side, who have built a reputation for late comebacks this season, again showed patience and belief rather than panic in a high-pressure title clash.
Key goals and turning points
- Baena opened the scoring around the 19th minute, timing his run perfectly to latch onto a through ball and chip the advancing goalkeeper, with VAR confirming the goal after an initial offside flag.
- Raphinha equalised less than 10 minutes later, racing onto a defence-splitting pass from Pedri, rounding Oblak and finishing into an empty net.
- Robert Lewandowski missed a golden chance to flip the game before half-time, lifting a penalty over the bar and then seeing a close-range header saved.
- Dani Olmo made it 2-1 with a precise low finish midway through the second half after combining with Lewandowski, but appeared to injure his shoulder in the follow-through and had to be substituted.
- Substitute Ferran Torres secured the win in stoppage time, arriving unmarked to sweep in from close range after a low cross from the left, killing off Atlético’s late push for an equaliser.
Title race implications
The victory moves Barcelona four points clear of Real Madrid at the top of La Liga, putting immediate pressure on their rivals ahead of Madrid’s next fixture. It also extends Barcelona’s strong league run under Flick, with the champions now stringing together a series of wins after their earlier El Clásico setback.
Beyond the table, the performance will fuel optimism among supporters who saw key attackers like Raphinha and Olmo contribute decisively in a big game, even as Olmo’s fitness becomes a short-term concern. The result reinforces the image of a Barcelona side capable of recovering from early blows and managing tense finishes in front of a demanding Camp Nou crowd.
Atlético’s streak brought to an end
For Atlético, the defeat ends a seven-match winning run in all competitions and marks their first La Liga loss since the opening day of the season. Simeone’s team improved after the interval, creating notable chances through Thiago Almada and Antoine Griezmann, but their wastefulness in front of goal cost them the chance to leave Barcelona with a point.
The loss also halts Atlético’s recent momentum in the title race, leaving them trailing further behind Barcelona and slipping into a chase rather than a genuine neck-and-neck fight at the summit. How they respond in the coming weeks will determine whether this night is remembered as a blip or the moment their challenge started to fade.






