Sports
How Alonso’s start compares to Real Madrid coaches Mourinho, Ancelotti, Zidane
As his final news conference of 2025 came to an end, Xabi Alonso had one last word for the journalists gathered in the Santiago Bernabéu press room. Real Madrid had just beaten Sevilla 2-0 in LaLiga on Saturday and, before taking a well-earned Christmas break, Alonso had a point to make.
“Happy holidays to everyone,” he said, getting to his feet, before adding with a smile: “Tranquilos” (“Keep calm”). It was a good-natured joke at the media’s expense after weeks of excitable speculation about Alonso’s future as coach thanks to a worrying dip in form.
The implication going into the league’s two-week festive holiday was: Don’t worry about me. I’m not going anywhere. See you in January.
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Alonso’s first six months at Real Madrid have been anything but calm. “Tomorrow, the rock ‘n’ roll begins,” the coach said before his first game at the FIFA Club World Cup, and since then it has been nonstop drama.
The summer tournament in the U.S. — which ended for Madrid with 4-0 semifinal hammering by Paris Saint-Germain — soon forgotten, 2025-26 began with 13 wins in 14 games. Alonso’s team was seemingly a smooth-running, if unspectacular, machine.
Since then, the wheels have come off. If a 5-2 defeat to Atlético Madrid in September was a shock, a UEFA Champions League loss to Liverpool, followed by three consecutive draws in LaLiga and then defeats to Celta Vigo and Manchester City, felt like a full-blown crisis.
Sources told ESPN earlier this month that Madrid were considering their coaching options, and three, unconvincing wins last week — against Alavés, Talavera de la Reina and Sevilla — have done little to strengthen Alonso’s position. Despite his call for calm, the coach goes into Christmas with his future uncertain.
Madrid, and club president Florentino Pérez, are notoriously impatient when their coaches don’t deliver. Julen Lopetegui — poached from the Spain national team on the eve of the 2018 FIFA World Cup — lasted just 137 days. Rafa Benítez lasted 215.
A look at the first six months for Madrid’s past 15 years of coaches, starting with José Mourinho in 2010, suggests that if Alonso has underperformed in comparison to his predecessors, it isn’t by much. The question for Pérez and his advisors is whether Alonso’s results are bad enough to justify sacking a highly-rated young coach, a club legend as a player, who became one of the most sought-after managers in football after his record-breaking achievements at Bayer Leverkusen.
For the purposes of this comparison, we’ve omitted Madrid’s Club World Cup games, given that Alonso has insisted on describing them as an add-on to last season, and none of his predecessors faced anything comparable. With Alonso’s team having played 25 matches in LaLiga, the Champions League and the Copa del Rey in 2025-26, we’ve looked at the first 25 games for Madrid’s previous coaches in those competitions — if they made it that far.
José Mourinho (August-December 2010)
Mourinho joined Madrid having just won the Champions League with Inter Milan. He arrived in LaLiga with a demanding brief: toppling Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona. He won an impressive 20 of his first 25 games in charge, with a win percentage of 80%, and keeping a frankly ridiculous 15 clean sheets. A squad packed with attacking talent — including Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema, Gonzalo Higuaín, Mesut Özil and Kaká, as well as a certain Xabi Alonso in midfield — posted some high-scoring wins, such as an 8-0 Copa del Rey thrashing of Levante. But there was also one, glaring loss: the famous 5-0 defeat to Barça at the Bernabéu, one of the most iconic results in Clásico history.
Carlo Ancelotti (August-December 2013)
After the high emotional toll of the Mourinho era, Madrid looked to calm things down with the cool head of Ancelotti. His 19 wins out of 25 gave him a start close to Mourinho’s, with a win percentage of 76%, and his team scored more goals (71, to José’s 67) but was, predictably, less defensively secure, conceding 26 times, to Mourinho’s 10. The team’s defeats were less dramatic, but nonetheless damaging: in September, they were beaten 1-0 at the Bernabéu by Diego Simeone’s Atlético Madrid, and in October, they lost 2-1 to Barcelona at Camp Nou.
Rafa Benítez (August 2015-January 2016)
Each coach at Madrid is often a reaction to the last, and Ancelotti’s easy-going, player-first regime was replaced by Benítez’s more hands-on, rigid approach. The results weren’t good, with just 16 wins in Benítez’s first 25 games giving him a mere 64% win percentage. There were more clean sheets than under Ancelotti — 12 in 25 games — and the team’s front three of Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth Bale and Karim Benzema ensured some big wins, such as a 10-2 humbling of Rayo Vallecano in December. But by then, the damage had already been done. A 0-4 home defeat to Barcelona on Nov. 21, 2015 effectively spelled the end for Benítez, who abandoned his safety-first principles to play Toni Kroos, Luka Modric and James Rodríguez as a three-man midfield, with predictable results. By January, Benítez was gone.
Zinedine Zidane (January-May 2016)
Zidane inherited an unhappy squad under Benítez, with the team third in LaLiga, and led them to win the Champions League five months later. Stepping up seamlessly from reserve team Castilla, he matched Ancelotti’s 76% win percentage, with victories in 19 of his first 25 games, and found a balance between attack and defence, keeping 11 clean sheets. Even his biggest defeat — a 2-0 loss at Wolfsburg in the Champions League quarterfinals — became a triumph when the team turned the tie around with a 3-0 second-leg victory a week later. Zidane’s first six months were the opening chapter for the two, glorious years that followed, later adding two more Champions Leagues to make it three consecutive European Cups, a feat unmatched in the modern era.
Julen Lopetegui (August-October 2018)
Lopetegui’s reign lasted just four months. His appointment was controversial — his impending arrival was announced hours before he was due to take Spain to the World Cup, leading to his abrupt sacking from the national-team job. His time in charge wasn’t much better. A win percentage of 46% is comfortably the lowest on this list, with a short-lived bright start followed by a run of one win in seven games, including three consecutive defeats in LaLiga. The team went almost eight hours without scoring a goal between September and October — an inauspicious start to the post-Ronaldo era — and suffered a decisive 5-1 defeat to Barcelona at Camp Nou on Oct. 28. That left Madrid ninth in LaLiga. “The board understands that there is a great difference between the quality of the Real Madrid squad, which has eight players nominated for the Ballon d’Or, and the results achieved until now,” a club statement read as Lopetegui was dismissed after 14 matches.
Santi Solari (October 2018-March 2019)
Solari — like Zidane, an internal promotion from Castilla — is now largely viewed as a failure, but the stats from his first 25 games in charge are actually fairly solid, with a 72% win percentage — winning 18 matches, drawing two, and losing five — and 10 clean sheets. The team’s scoring took a hit, though, with 57 goals scored in that time, fewer than under Mourinho, Ancelotti, Benítez or Zidane. Solari took some important decisions, dropping the underperforming Marcelo and Isco, and giving opportunities to a young Vinícius Júnior. But the real damage came later, when back-to-back defeats to Barça were followed by a fatal 4-1 home loss to Ajax in the Champions League.
Zinedine Zidane (March-November 2019)
Zidane returned at a difficult time, as Madrid’s third coach in a chaotic campaign which ended without winning a major trophy. His early results reflected that, with four defeats before the end of 2018-19 contributing to a 48% win percentage in his first 25 games back in the job. The team struggled at both ends of the pitch, scoring just 40 goals and conceding 28. The situation improved for the start of 2019-20, with the only disappointment being a 3-0 European loss to PSG. The team would later go on to clinch the LaLiga title in a season disrupted by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Carlo Ancelotti (August-December 2021)
If Zidane’s second spell didn’t hit the heights of the first, the same can’t be said of the unexpected return of Ancelotti. The Italian’s first 25 games back in charge were near flawless, the only exception being two consecutive defeats in late September and early October, to FC Sheriff and Espanyol. Otherwise, Ancelotti’s Madrid won 19 matches, to give him a 76% win percentage — matching that of his debut as coach — with a 15-game, three-month unbeaten streak between October and the New Year. That run included wins over rivals Barcelona — 2-1 at Camp Nou — and Atlético. Madrid, and Ancelotti, were back, and went on to win a LaLiga and Champions League double.
1:02
Alonso on Real Madrid’s board: ‘We’re in this together’
Real Madrid manager Xabi Alonso denies tension with the board amid questions about his future at the club.
Xabi Alonso (August-December 2025)
So, to Xabi. His 72% win percentage in his 25 games so far this season can’t match Mourinho, Ancelotti or Zidane. It’s the same as Solari’s — but that equates to just one win fewer than Ancelotti or Zidane (18, compared to their 19), and those two are now considered Madrid’s most successful, decorated coaches of the modern era.
Alonso’s team aren’t scoring as many goals as his predecessors — averaging 2.08 goals per game, compared to Mourinho’s 2.68, Ancelotti’s 2.84 (in his first spell) or even Benítez’s 2.64. At the other end, they are conceding an average of a goal per game, which matches Ancelotti, but can’t compete with Mourinho (0.4), Benítez (0.84) or Zidane’s first spell (0.72).
The highpoint for Alonso was the 2-1 Clásico win over champions Barcelona at the Bernabéu on Oct. 26. A week later, a 4-0 victory over Valencia made it 13 wins out of 14, a feeling of momentum building. But that has fizzled out entirely in the 11 games that have followed, which have included three defeats, three draws, and only one really good performance, a 3-0 win at Athletic Club on Dec. 3.
Alonso’s team might statistically be running just behind Ancelotti’s or Zidane’s after 25 games, but the feelings — the sensations, as they say in Spain — are of a team which is regressing, getting lost just when it should be finding itself. The frequent whistles from the Bernabéu crowd during the game against Sevilla last weekend were a sign that the fans are getting just as restless as president Pérez.
There are explanations, of course, for the teams’ predicament. Alonso, in his last news conference, pointed to an injury crisis which left him, at one point, without 11 first-team players. And even if there aren’t any concrete signs of it yet, given time and patience, Alonso’s track record suggests he’s capable of turning the situation around.
But at the Bernabéu, patience is the one resource which is in short supply.
Sports
David Beckham on Inter Miami new stadium: ‘Dreams really can come true’
Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham spoke of a dream come true as his team played its first ever game at Nu Stadium on Saturday — a 2-2 draw with Austin FC.
The Englishman, who helped to found the club in 2018 after six years with LA Galaxy and another six getting Miami up and running, has overseen the side’s meteoric rise to MLS champions and the home of Lionel Messi.
“When I came to America and the MLS 20 years ago, my dream was to win championships, help raise the game of soccer that I love so much and to build my own team,” Beckham said ahead of the draw against Austin.
“Thirteen years ago, I announced Miami was my choice. We had no name. We had no fans. We had no stadium. Today, I stand in our new home.
“We are champions of the MLS. We have the best player in the history of the game playing in Miami. Dreams really can come true.”
With the club having made its MLS debut in 2020, Miami has become home to some of LaLiga’s biggest stars of the last 15 years — Gonzalo Higuaín, Sergio Busquets, Jordi Alba, Luis Suárez and Messi have all played for Beckham’s team, where Javier Mascherano has been the head coach since Nov. 2024.
Following Messi’s arrival in 2023, Miami won the Supporters’ Shield in 2024 and claimed their first MLS title in 2025, with the Argentine winning the league’s MVP award in both seasons.
Up until now, though, the team has had to play their home games in Fort Lauderdale, about 25 miles north of Miami.
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Messi and Beckham were far from the only celebrities involved with Saturday’s game. Actor Matthew McConaughey, who is part of Austin FC’s ownership group, even wrote an open letter to Beckham to congratulate him on his nearly two-decade relationship with the league.
“As Austin visits Miami today for a little shindig on your new pitch, I want to first shout out a sincere ‘thank you’ — you didn’t create soccer over here in the US, but you damn sure supercharged it,” the actor wrote.
“When you came to the Galaxy you gave MLS fresh legitimacy, you turned games into events, and essentially changed MLS from a proving ground to a premier destination. THANK YOU.”
Information from ESPN’s Lizzy Becherano and The Associated Press was used in this report.
Sports
Inside the origin story of ‘One Shining Moment’ — the highlight of March Madness
The ball is tipped
And there you are
You’re running for your life
You’re a shooting star
David Barrett was sitting in a bar when the idea came to him. The 31-year-old musician had spent his entire young adult life grinding as a performer in the watering holes of Michigan. College bars. Dive bars. Even the occasional honky tonk. On this particular spring night in 1986, it was an East Lansing establishment known as the Varsity Inn and his set — a performance heard by perhaps two dozen patrons — was done.
And all the years
No one knows
Just how hard you worked
But now it shows
Barrett was unwinding over a drink. With one eye he watched the TV over the bar, watching Larry Bird’s Boston Celtics running over another unfortunate NBA opponent. His other eye was affixed on the woman who had served him that drink.
“The waitress was so beautiful, I thought, well, I’m a songwriter, so perhaps my only chance to catch her attention was through poetry,” Barrett says today. “If I could express to her the poetry of Larry Bird’s abilities at the height of his career, this special moment in his life creating so many special moments on the court, perhaps she would be impressed.”
Well, was she?
“No, she was rather busy.”
No offense to Barrett, but we should all be thankful that she had more critical tasks than posting up at the bar to admire the singer’s basketball spoken word. Because it was within that space of lonely time that, inspired by his own lesson about moments, he scribbled three words onto a cocktail napkin. The following morning, he expanded those words into a chorus, this time onto a stack of napkins at a brunch spot, The Knight Cap Too.
In one shining moment,
it’s all on the line
One shining moment,
there frozen in time
For nearly 40 years, those lyrics and the tune Barrett wrote to accompany them have been the soundtrack of our college basketball lives. On Monday night, shortly after the men’s college basketball national champion is crowned, the winning team will lock arms on the floor of Lucas Oil Stadium, gaze up at the jumbotron and soak up a three-minute montage of clips from this year’s tournament, set to Barrett’s song, building to the inevitable 30-second climax of images of them winning the very title that they are very much still celebrating.
“There are so many moments that make up a championship celebration,” explains Mike Krzyzewski, who won five national titles as Duke’s head coach. “There’s the moment the game ends. There’s hugging your family. There’s cutting down the nets. The moment of being handed the trophy. But the moment it feels real is when they play ‘One Shining Moment.'”
“It’s this literal life-flashing-before-your-eyes thing, watching that video set to that song,” adds John Calipari, who won it all with Kentucky in 2012. “It’s like watching a movie of your life, that you wrote, with the people who wrote it with you.”
“You also don’t just watch it if you win it,” says Tom Izzo, who celebrated with Michigan State in 2000. “If you are there at the game, you wait to see it. If you are home on the sofa, you wait to see it. The season isn’t done until you hear that song.”
And to think, the NFL almost intercepted it right out from under college basketball’s nose.
For that moment, let’s go back to ’86. That’s when Barrett met sports reporter Armen Keteyian. Keteyian, like Barrett, was a native of the Detroit area and had moved to New York to write for Sports Illustrated. Whenever Barrett went East, he’d stay at Keteyian’s apartment. During one of those visits, the two were watching the NBA Finals on TV — Larry Bird again, doing work against the Houston Rockets — and Barrett mentioned his basketball song from the napkins.
Keteyian told Barrett that if he got the song recorded, he’d love to hear it.
A few weeks later, a cassette was waiting in Keteyian’s mailbox, tracks laid down in a make-do studio used for local advertising jingles. The reporter loved it, so he walked the tape over to a colleague in TV production.
“One day my phone rang and the gentleman on the other end said he was Doug Towey and he was the creative director at CBS Sports,” Barrett recalls now, his throat catching to hold back tears. “Of course, I didn’t believe him at first. He sounded like a buddy of mine pulling a prank. But over the next 15 minutes, I made a friend for life over a phone call that changed my life.”
Towey, a sports television legend — the theme music for The Masters, the iconic CBS Sports college sports themes, you name it and Towey was probably behind it — had fallen in love with the song and told Barrett that he really, really wanted to use it for … Super Bowl XXI?
“Yes, it was a basketball song, but you know what you do not do in that situation?” Barrett says. “You do not say no to CBS. Why yes, Doug Towey, please use my song for the Super Bowl!”
CBS even flew Barrett out to Pasadena to watch the matchup between John Elway’s Denver Broncos and Lawrence Taylor’s New York Giants. During his postgame report, sportscaster Brent Musburger even quoted the song. “The New York Giants, their first Super Bowl triumph, a shining moment they will never forget…” The time had arrived. Barrett’s big break was happening!
But it never ran. The Super Bowl-winning Giants were a little too chatty in their postgame locker room interviews, so the broadcast ran long, and time ran out. Barrett was crushed — until a second call from Towey.
“He said they wanted to use it for March Madness,” Barrett’s voice nearly explodes as he tells the story. “So, my little song about basketball, you know what? It figured out a way to make sure it was still a basketball song.”
On March 30, 1987, “One Shining Moment” made its debut in the most perfectly shiny momentous manner.
Indiana’s Keith Smart had stroked a drifting corner jump shot with four seconds remaining to defeat Syracuse for the championship. CBS Sports editors scrambled to add nine shots from that game to the end of the montage they had already pieced together throughout the month. The seventh of those images was Smart’s dagger.
From a clunky makeshift video edit room next to the CBS production truck in the bowels of the Superdome, the instant those shots were added, the videotape was popped and sprinted by hand via a panicked young producer to the end of that truck, where tape machines had just spent hours turning around instant replays and interview clips for the telecast. It got crammed into one of those machines, cued, and ready to play.
Once again, it was Musburger who did the lead-in honors. And this time it aired.
“The idea of the song, that one moment can change everything. Well, that’s what happened to me in that moment,” says Barrett, who has since composed themes for CBS, ABC and PBS, melodic backdrops for the Olympics, U.S. Open tennis, the PGA Championship, and a documentary about C.S. Lewis. He’s won two Emmys.
His go-to joke now is to say: “After all those years, suddenly I had talent!”
Since that night, CBS Sports and now TNT have aired 38 editions of “One Shining Moment” performed by four different singers. Barrett himself did the honors over the first seven editions before Towey recruited Philadelphia soul legend Teddy Pendergrass for a new version. Bennett’s vocals returned in 2000, along with a bluesier overhaul of the tune. Two years after that, Barrett received another call from Towey, asking how he’d feel if Luther Vandross were to give the song a spin. Barrett said of course and asked when it would happen. Towey, clearly having already made up his mind before the call, told Barrett that Vandross was slated to be in the studio that very night.
Vandross laid down his vocals in the winter of 2002, captured by CBS cameras to be intercut with the hoops highlights in true music video fashion. The following spring Vandross suffered a massive stroke that forever altered his voice, meaning that “One Shining Moment” was the final song recorded by the legendary artist.
It has been Luther’s song ever since, with the exception of 2010, when Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson’s rendition was beloved for its sound but criticized because the internet claimed it was imbalanced, with too much of her and not enough college basketball. (At 3:12, it’s only a few seconds longer than average, and Hudson is featured for a total of about eight seconds.)
Screening all 38 editions of “One Shining Moment” (thanks, Internet!) is a history lesson not just on college basketball, but television production. Grainy standard definition video transitions into 4K HD as majestically as the images of 1980s feathered hairstyles morph into low burst fades. The production process has evolved not unlike the game being played on the floor of the arena. Digitized and fast-paced, with the ability to be nimble on the fly like UConn and Michigan on the break. But the spirit of how it is pieced together hasn’t changed at all.
“We have a dedicated team that travels to the Final Four. They are on site,” explains Drew Watkins, SVP and Creative Director of TNT Sports, from the sprawling TV production compound that sits outside the south gate of Lucas Oil Stadium.
Watkins has been with TNT since 2000; before that he was an entry-level producer at ESPN. On Monday night, he will be keeping an eye on his on-site producer and editor, George Adams and Chris Vining.
“They’re in one of our edit trucks and are linked in with the studio and the game production truck,” Watkins says of how it will all go down as the clock ticks down on the title game. “So, when we’re editing those plays, and we’re filling in those last few moments and winners are being decided and ‘One Shining Moment’ is minutes away from airing, there is a team on site in the TV compound that is putting those shots together, talking to the broadcast trucks to make sure everything is on track.”
There will actually be two edit suites running simultaneously, just in case. Because all it takes is one power outage, one video glitch or one computer deciding that it’s a great time for a restart, to turn the dream of Barrett’s song into one nightmare moment. Redundancy is a producer’s best friend. No one wants to be the person who ended a four-decade streak of making air.
“The good news is that we have backups in place,” Watkins said. “The better news is that nobody’s having to pop a tape and run it across a parking lot anymore.”
Once that final shot is added and the final click of the mouse sends the finished product to the truck, Adams, Vining, Watkins and their colleagues make sure to pause and watch their work go out into the world, collapsed back into the chairs of their respective production trucks, just like the 20-plus million viewers at home.
Meanwhile, the viewing of “One Shining Moment” as it airs on the arena’s big screen always feels downright intimate, even on a tiny basketball floor situated in the center of a 70,000-seat NFL stadium-turned-basketball gym.
That’s the part that chokes up Krzyzewski, Calipari and Izzo when they talk about it. The part that former players always remember as the pinnacle of their first minutes as champions.
On Monday night, the man who brought us the song will be right there with them. Because it’s his favorite part, too: David Barrett’s literal “One Shining Moment.”
“People ask me all the time which ‘One Shining Moment’ is my favorite one to watch, but I can’t answer that. That’s impossible,” he said on Saturday morning as he prepared to attend the semifinal games with his wife, Tracy. (No, she’s not the waitress from East Lansing, though that server, Jan Shoemaker, and Barrett were eventually reunited through a mutual friend.)
Tracy is a Michigan alum, and she and David still live in the Detroit area, where they raised two girls. As soon as they arrived in Indianapolis, they purchased some Block M Final Four gear before they witnessed the Wolverines’ devastation of the Arizona Wildcats to officially become the favorites to win the national title.
“No, I do not have a favorite ‘One Shining Moment,'” Barrett repeated. Then he laughed. “But Monday night, if we get to watch the home team watch themselves celebrate a championship, set to my little basketball song, well…”
That would be a moment.
“Yes, it would.”
Sports
Duke star Cam Boozer says he suffered fractures around eye
INDIANAPOLIS — Duke star freshman Cameron Boozer, a projected top-five pick in the 2026 NBA draft, said he suffered multiple fractures around one of his eyes during his team’s loss to UConn in the Elite Eight.
Boozer did not offer specifics about the injury but said he decided against surgery only two months before the NBA draft.
“I have a couple of fractures, but I’m all good,” Boozer said as he accepted The Associated Press and United States Basketball Writers Association player of the year awards. “I’m just going through the healing process. It hurt in the game, but I wish the outcome would have been better, but that’s not really what I’m here to focus on. We had a great year. Like I said, it’s an individual award, but I wouldn’t be here without my teammates and my coaches.”
During Duke’s 73-72 loss to UConn on March 29 — decided on Braylon Mullins‘ 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds to play — Boozer took an elbow to the face as he drove to the rim on 7-foot-1 center Eric Reibe. Soon after the play, Boozer’s right eye began to swell and a Duke trainer applied a soda can to his face while he sat on the bench.
Depending on its severity, the eye injury could impact Boozer’s standing in the NBA draft. He is one of the most decorated players in college basketball history, but he has faced scrutiny about whether he has the next-level physical tools to compete against bigger, stronger and more athletic players in the NBA.
The 6-9, 250-pound forward said he is ready to “win” in the NBA, no matter where he’s picked.
“I think I’m just a winning player, all-around player. I think I impact the game in so many different ways,” Boozer said. “And I think my competitiveness translates to any level. I think any team who takes a chance on me is going to be very happy with the results they get from it.”
Boozer admitted that he had a lot of emotions accepting awards in Indianapolis, the site of this year’s Final Four, a week after his team had been eliminated by the Huskies, who will face Michigan in the national title game Monday night. But those emotions were secondary to his feelings after his twin brother, Cayden Boozer, faced backlash on social media following his turnover that preceded Mullins’ game-winning shot in the loss.
“First of all, I’d like to say it’s definitely nasty, but that’s not the reason, that one play is not the reason we lost,” Cameron Boozer said. “But just being there for him, obviously it’s tough. It’s going to be hard for anyone to go through that. There is not really that much I can say to make him feel better. We’re all hurting as a team, but we’re going to get through it together. We’re a super-connected group. It’s definitely a hard moment, but he’s a tough guy. We’re all tough. It’s going to make us so much better going forward. So it’s something you’ve got to take on a chin and learn and grow from.”
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