Madrid clubs back on top in European soccer

Atletico Madrid players celebrate at the expense of sensation Leicester City

Madrid clubs are making a habit of succeeding in European soccer.

For the third time in four seasons, both Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid have made it to Champions League semifinals.

Real Madrid reached the last four for the seventh straight time yesterday by eliminating Bayern Munich 6-3 on aggregate after a hat trick from Cristiano Ronaldo in a 4-2 win at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. Atletico Madrid advanced to the semis for the third time in four years by getting past Leicester 2-1 on aggregate following a 1-1 second-leg draw in England.

Barcelona could be the other Spanish club to join the party if it overturns a 3-0 first-leg loss against Italian champion Juventus at the Camp Nou. Spanish clubs have won the European competition the last three seasons.

Madrid and Atletico made it all the way to the final in 2014 and 2016, with Madrid coming out on top both times. The rivals also met in the quarterfinals in 2014-15, when Madrid again succeeded but was knocked out in the next round by Juventus.

A draw tomorrow will determine whether there will be another matchup between the Madrid clubs right away in the semifinals or if there will be another possibility for a derby in the final in Cardiff.

The other semifinalist will be either Monaco or Borussia Dortmund. Monaco won the first leg 3-2.

“Let’s see what happens on Friday,” Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane said. “We are Real Madrid and if we want to win something we have to play against everyone. We are going to have to fight hard again over two games in the semifinals and the goal is to get to Cardiff.”

Madrid is going for a record 12th title in Europe’s top club competition.

“It’s too early to think about that, but hopefully that’s what we will achieve in the end,” said Ronaldo.

“Real Madrid was the better team,” he said. “It’s not easy to score six goals against a team like Bayern Munich. We deserved to go through.”

Atletico will be trying to win its first European Cup title and put an end to an uncomfortable streak of runner-up finishes. In addition to the recent losses to Madrid, it also finished second in the 1974 final against Bayern.

“It’s thrilling to make it to the semifinals again,” Atletico coach Diego Simeone said. “There is only one way to win the Champions, which is to keep insisting, insisting and insisting again.”

Atletico lost the 2014 final after conceding an injury time equalizer that extended the match into extra time. Last year, it lost in a penalty shootout.

Atletico has become a steady contender in European football since the arrival of Simeone five years ago, but the coach still dismisses the notion that the team is on the same level as the continent’s powerhouses.

“The big teams are Bayern, Barcelona, Real Madrid, especially in the financial aspect,” he said. “We are not a big team like that, but we are very competitive, that’s for sure. The first day I got here, my only goal was to turn Atletico into a competitive team that could contend in all competitions that it played.”

The 2014 Spanish champion, Atletico is third in this year’s Spanish league, 10 points behind leader Madrid, which is trying to win the competition for the first time since 2012.

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