Mendy’s late goal sees Madrid beat 10-man Atalanta

An 86th-minute goal from Ferland Mendy saw the Spanish giant claim victory over Atalanta

BERGAMO, ITALY - FEBRUARY 24: Ferland Mendy of Real Madrid scores the opening goal during the UEFA Champions League Round of 16 match between Atalanta and Real Madrid at Gewiss Stadium on February 24, 2021 in Bergamo, Italy. (Photo by Emilio Andreoli/Getty Images)
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Real Madrid struggled to break down 10-man Atalanta before Ferland Mendy netted an 86th-minute winner to give the Spanish giant a 1-0 win in the first leg of the round of 16 on Wednesday.

Madrid entered the game as the big favourite despite a slew of injuries, and Atalanta’s chances diminished further when midfielder Remo Freuler was sent off in the 17th minute after being adjudged to have denied a scoring opportunity.

“The match was ruined,” Atalanta coach Gian Piero Gasperini said.

“I don’t know what the result would have been, we might have still lost, but it would have been a much different and better match.”

Madrid — which was missing players including forward Karim Benzema, midfielder Eden Hazard and captain Sergio Ramos — still found it difficult to test Atalanta goalkeeper Pierluigi Gollini until the end of the first half, when he pulled off a great reaction save to keep out Casemiro’s header from Toni Kroos’ free kick.

Just as it looked as if Atalanta would hold on for a draw, Mendy received the ball outside the area after a corner and curled a shot into the right side of the net from 20 yards.

“Yes, we’d practiced that play, but it wasn’t supposed to be Ferland who took the shot,” said Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane with a smile.

“We didn’t have a great game tonight but what was most important was the result."

"Scoring away from home was important for us.”

The second leg will be on March 16 in Madrid.

Atalanta can take comfort from the fact it has won all its European matches away from home this season, including a 2-0 victory over Liverpool at Anfield.

“We just have to win in Madrid,” Gasperini said.

“It’s easy — we can’t overthink, we just have one possibility. We must win.”

Manchester City beat Borussia Mönchengladbach 2-0 in the other round-of-16 match on Wednesday.

Madrid is a 13-time European Cup winner while Atalanta only made its debut in the competition last year, when it surprisingly reached the quarterfinals where it came within a couple of minutes of eliminating Paris Saint-Germain.

The match was played in an empty stadium because of coronavirus restrictions but approximately 5,000 fans were waiting outside the stadium in Bergamo before the game, despite the local health authority urging supporters to stay away.

They set off fireworks and flares as they welcomed the team bus.

Atalanta’s chances of beating its more illustrious opponent diminished when Freuler was sent off for barging over Mendy on the edge of his own penalty area.

“There’s the temptation to remove any form of contact in football and that is suicide for soccer,” Gasperini said.

“We can’t have referees who have never played football and can’t tell the difference between a foul and a challenge."

"If they don’t understand that they should do another job. You don’t need to be an engineer at NASA to understand these things. What happened tonight was unbelievable.”

Gasperini immediately told midfielder Mario Pašalić to start warming up and a decision on who to take off was made for him on the half hour, with forward Duván Zapata limping after an earlier challenge.

Despite the numerical advantage, Madrid struggled to create goal-scoring opportunities until the closing stages of the half when it had a couple of shots deflected off target and Gollini denied Casemiro.

Atalanta forward Luis Muriel almost gave Atalanta the lead instead but fired wide of the left upright.

Madrid upped the pressure on Atalanta after the break but again failed to really test Gollini.

Only four of its 18 shots were on target.