Notebook: Breaking down the past week of Wisconsinâs spring ball practices
Insights from the Wisconsin Badgers' recent spring practices.
Atlético de Madrid advanced to the UEFA Champions League semifinals despite a 2-1 loss to FC Barcelona, marking a significant achievement under Diego Simeone. This victory eliminates Barcelona from two cup competitions within months.
Ademola Lookman second striker of Atletico de Madrid and Nigeria celebrates after scoring his sides first goal during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Quarter-Final Second Leg match between Club Atlético de Madrid and FC Barcelona at Estadio Riyadh Air Metropolitano on April 14, 2026 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images
AtlĂ©tico de Madrid are through to the UEFA Champions League semifinals after a dramatic 2-1 loss to FC Barcelona on Tuesday night. It marks the first time in Diego Simeoneâs tenure when AtlĂ©tico have lost a home match in the Champions League knockout stage. But it ends a nine-year drought for Simeoneâs men as they reach the last four of the Champions League â and theyâve done it by eliminating Barcelona from a second cup competition in as many months.
Lamine Yamal (in the fourth minute) and FerrĂĄn Torres (in the 24th) struck quickly to erase AtlĂ©ticoâs first-leg advantage. Ademola Lookmanâs response, on a lightning-quick counterattack, ended the scoring at the 30:11 mark.
What followed was 67 minutes and 50 seconds of survival.
Barcelona ended the game with 71 percent possession and 10 men after Ăric Garcia was sent off for denying Alexander SĂžrloth a clear goal-scoring opportunity. The Blaugrana buzzed around the Colchonerosâ jittery back line until the very end but hardly created chances after halftime â and especially after Torresâ second goal was called back for offsides â as the hosts saw out a narrow result that secured their progression to the semis.
Letâs dive into some takeaways from another loss to Barcelona that functions as a win.
AtlĂ©tico did not start this game well at all. ClĂ©ment Lenglet, making his first Champions League start for nearly six months, bounced an errant pass off Yamal; Torres played it back to Yamal, who rolled the opening goal past Juan Musso. Twenty minutes later, Lenglet was caught out again as he reacted too slowly to Dani Olmoâs through ball for Torres before the Spain striker ripped the second goal beyond Mussoâs reach. Lenglet, just a bundle of nerves by this point, gave away the ball again from the ensuing kickoff, and Yamalâs trivela assist for FermĂn LĂłpez would have made it 3-0 if not for a superlative save from Musso
It felt as if the walls were closing in. Barcelona had all the momentum. But along came Lookman to snatch it right back.
The move started with Koke, dropping deep to help build play amid Lengletâs issues with progressing the ball. Koke passed to Robin Le Normand, who moved it along to Nahuel Molina. Immediately upon seeing Molina receive the pass â and with Barcelona disorganized in the center of the park â Griezmann dropped back into the Atleti half. He touched the ball on to Marcos Llorente, who blew past Ăric GarcĂa on a trademark barreling run into the Barça half, carried into the penalty area and supplied Lookman with an expertly-weighted assist.
But how about Lookmanâs finish? He held off Jules KoundĂ© and clipped the ball delicately past Joan GarcĂa at the âkeeperâs near post. It was a sensational goal from an absolutely sensational player â and in the end, it decided a tight, intense, nerve-wracking three-hour tie.
Lookman has provided six goals and three assists in 17 games, invaluable contributions that have vaulted AtlĂ©tico into this competitionâs semifinals and into the Copa del Rey final in a few daysâ time. Lookmanâs speed, directness, intelligence and technique have gone some way toward fixing Atletiâs attack and restoring the counterattacking identity that Simeoneâs first teams bore; his improvement off the ball in recent matches speaks to his unwavering commitment to enhancing his role, embracing the work Simeone demands his attackers put in.
Lookmanâs âŹ35 million transfer from Atalanta in February looks cheaper by the day. Jugadorazo.
In the 70th minute, Ruggeri and Gavi collided as they went for a ball in the air. Gaviâs elbow caught Ruggeri over the right eye, which paused play for a few minutes as a big, blue bandage was wrapped around the Italianâs head.
Ruggeri soldiered on and continued doing what he had done for most of the tie: keeping Lamine Yamal at bay as well an anyone realistically can against someone of his ability.
âStopping Lamine Yamalâ is a matter of context. He is 18 years old and he might be the best player on the planet. That in and of itself is extraordinary. He took 93 touches in the Metropolitano on Tuesday, including 14 in the AtlĂ©tico box; he completed nine dribbles and created four big chances. Through individual quality and sheer volume, Yamal ensures that he wonât be silenced.
So, you have to do what you can. And thanks to his anticipation, length and physical stature, Ruggeri has a unique set of attributes that made Yamal work pretty hard to accrue his stats in Tuesdayâs second leg.
Ruggeri made five ball recoveries, won seven of 14 duels and three of five tackles. Over both legs, Ruggeri won 11 duels, recovered the ball 10 times, made five tackles and picked up the assist on Alexander SĂžrlothâs key goal in the first leg.
For the concerns about Ruggeriâs clunkiness and lack of pace, he has showcased the attitude and clutch gene needed to compete at the top level. Heâs quickly endearing himself as a cult hero â and most vitally, someone who can be counted on when the stakes are at their highest.
âHow many Llorentes have played in the match today?â asked DAZNâs Ălex De Llano. âThe â14â has appeared everywhere to offer security, stop the opponent, get his team out (from their own half). Simply spectacular.â
Llorente has spoken this season about the feeling that he is in his physical and professional prime. His performance on Tuesday surely cements his status as an elite todocampista for the uninitiated.
Llorente won eight ground duels and five tackles in addition to providing the priceless assist to Lookman for the goal that â eventually â took Atleti through to the semis. But one instinctive action against a tiring Barça in the second half proved his overall value and fundamental importance to the team is far more than just âhe can play at right-back and in central midfield!â
In the 77th minute, Llorente, Koke, SĂžrloth and Nico Gonzalez swarmed Barça captain Pedri as he tried to build a move. Koke pried the ball free, and SĂžrloth instinctively knocked it down for Llorente, who went backwards for Le Normand. The center-back cycled the ball to Molina, and Nico quickly formed a triangle with the right-back and Llorente. Nico then laid it off to Llorente, who sprung SĂžrloth free with a through ball â a move that prompted Ăric GarcĂa to haul down SĂžrloth on his way into the Barça box, an action that led to referee ClĂ©ment Turpin showing the defender a red card following a VAR review.
Llorente will never have another 12-goal, 11-assist season like he had when AtlĂ©tico won LaLiga in 2021. Thatâs okay. This version is better. For his versatility, leadership and exceptional reading of the game, heâs become one of the best players around.
Cholo Simeone had a big call to make upon Jan Oblakâs return to training on Monday: would he reinstall the clubâs greatest-ever goalkeeper for the second leg, or would he stick with the âhot handâ in Juan Musso?
Simeone decided on Musso. It was the right decision. He kept the scoreline from reading 0-3 with his save on FermĂn. He exudes so much confidence in coming out to claim the ball, in his ability to intercept crosses and to organize the defense.
Musso will keep his place as Atleti prepare now for a cup final this coming Saturday â after all, he is the Copa del Rey goalkeeper. But what happens after that, two weeks from a Champions League semifinal against either Arsenal or Sporting Clube de Portugal?
Oblak is fit again. But Musso has built such a strong case for himself in the past month while the Slovenian has been injured that I find myself increasingly thinking âwell, hang onâŠmaybe Musso should just keep the job.â
Thatâs not to say returning Oblak to the starting lineup would be indefensible. For Godâs sake, the guy has won six Zamora Trophies. But Oblak is familiar with this situation; once upon a time, he himself was the beneficiary.
Oblak won the GK1 job on March 17, 2015, when Miguel Ăngel MoyĂ suffered a muscle injury midway through the first half of a Champions League round of 16 tie against Bayer Leverkusen. Oblak kept out the German side for the next 90 minutes and change before he became a penalty shootout hero. Atleti advanced to the quarterfinals, and the rest is history.
All these years later, and Musso has stepped up in Oblakâs absence. Time will tell if El Cholo has a change of heart and reverts to Oblak, who has defended the Atleti goal with legendary distinction for 10-plus years. But it says something that, even with five losses from the past six games across all competitions, Mussoâs performances have stood out to such a degree that we are actively contemplating the end of Oblakâs reign between the sticks.
Atlético de Madrid qualified by eliminating FC Barcelona despite losing 2-1 in the second leg, having secured a first-leg advantage.
This loss marked the first time in Diego Simeone's tenure that Atlético lost a home match in the Champions League knockout stage.
Lamine Yamal and Ferrån Torres scored for Barcelona, quickly erasing Atlético's first-leg advantage.
This victory ends a nine-year drought for Atlético de Madrid in reaching the Champions League semifinals.
Insights from the Wisconsin Badgers' recent spring practices.

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