Ancelotti: Vinicius red card vs City was a joke.

Ancelotti blasts Vinicius's red card vs. Man City as a "joke." Is Real Madrid truly robbed, or is it classic entitlement masking UCL failure?

Real Madrid is screaming “joke” after their Champions League exit. They blame a costly red card for star man Vinicius Jr. against Manchester City. This is classic Madrid entitlement, masking their own failures on the biggest stage.

The drama unfolded on April 14, 2026. Madrid faced City in the second leg of their quarter-final clash. The aggregate score was tied 1-1 before kick-off.

City’s Phil Foden scored first in the 18th minute. Madrid’s Rodrygo equalized in the 36th minute. Then came the moment everyone is talking about.

The Controversial Whistle

In the 63rd minute, Vinicius Jr. challenged City defender Rúben Dias in an aerial duel.

The referee, after a lengthy VAR review, showed a straight red card. He cited an alleged elbow.

Madrid’s bench erupted. Coach Carlo Ancelotti was visibly incensed. The decision was called “disgraceful.”

City capitalized on their advantage. Erling Haaland scored the winning goal in the 78th minute.

City won 2-1 on the night, advancing with a 3-2 aggregate score.

Ancelotti didn’t hold back. He said, “It’s a joke. A disgraceful decision that changed the entire game. Vinicius barely touched him. This is not football. We feel robbed.”

“It’s a joke. A disgraceful decision that changed the entire game. Vinicius barely touched him. This is not football. We feel robbed.” — Carlo Ancelotti, Real Madrid Coach

Vinicius Jr. took to Instagram to voice his fury. “Robbed. My dream stolen. This isn’t fair. They took it away from us,” he posted.

City coach Pep Guardiola was more reserved. He called it a “tough decision” for the referee.

The Blade’s Reality Check

Let’s be real. Madrid’s outrage is predictable.

It’s the standard script for a giant club losing a big game. They lost, now they want to blame the referee. This is a tired act.

The club misses out on serious cash. Reaching the semi-finals means an estimated €12.5 million.

That’s a huge hit to the coffers. Commercial revenues also take a dive.

This financial sting stings more than any “stolen dream.”

Fans on X and Reddit are crying foul. They claim UCL refs hate Madrid.

They say it’s rigged for Premier League or German clubs. Give me a break.

Every fan base screams conspiracy when their team loses. It’s a tale as old as football itself.

Was the red card harsh? Maybe.

Was it the only reason Madrid lost? Absolutely not.

City was strong. They adapted. They scored.

That’s what champions do.

Beyond the Whistle

This incident fuels the endless VAR debate. Technology was supposed to fix everything.

Instead, it just shifts the blame. Now, it’s about interpretation, not just clear errors.

The human element, the passion, is getting lost.

Madrid has a history of controversial calls, both for and against them. They’ve benefited plenty in the past.

Now they’re on the wrong side, and the world is supposed to stop? It doesn’t work that way.

Manchester City played their game. Haaland scored the winner.

They earned their spot in the semi-finals.

Madrid’s focus on the red card distracts from City’s resilience. It ignores their overall quality.

This isn’t about fairness. This is about massive stakes, massive egos, and massive money.

A single decision can swing millions. It can end a European dream.

Madrid’s tears are just part of the show.

Photo: Ricardo Stuckert


Source: Google News

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Alex "The Blade" Rossi

Hockey & Soccer Reporter covering NHL, MLS, International Soccer, and the Premier League.