Preview: Real Madrid vs. Stuttgart

Preview: Real Madrid vs. Stuttgart

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Stuttgart make their return to the Champions League this week following an absence of 15 years, and they couldn’t have been handed a more daunting place to do so.


By Ian King


They return to European football’s premier competition with a trip to the Bernabéu to play Real Madrid in the first round of ‘Swiss model’ matches which have replaced the group stages from this year on.

But should they be considered callow just because they haven’t played in this competition for some years? They ended last season in the Bundesliga above Bayern Munich as the runners-up to Bayer Leverkusen with a run of just one defeat in their last sixteen league matches and while this season started poorly, with a point from their first two matches, they’ve recovered since by easing through the first round of the DFB-Pokal and recording a convincing 3-1 win at Borussia Mönchengladbach last Saturday.

Coached by Sebastian Hoeneß, who’s the son of the former Stuttgart player Dieter Hoeneß and the nephew of the legendary Uli, this is no team of superstars, with the most familiar name being Deniz Undav, who signed a season-long loan from Brighton last summer, scored 18 goals in the Bundesliga, and made his signing permanent in August. They’re only in 10th place in the current table, but with only three games played so far that doesn’t necessarily tell us very much. 

The array of platinum-plated superstars facing them is, following the arrival of Kylian Mbappé during the summer, more daunting than ever, but that’s not to say that Real Madrid have been particularly glittering so far. They’ve already picked up their first piece of silverware of the season by comfortably beating Atalanta to win the UEFA Super Cup in Warsaw last month, but their form in La Liga has been a little patchier. 

They’ve only won three of their opening five games, with disappointing draws at Mallorca and Las Palmas in their first two away games. They’ve won their last two league matches, but that took two penalty kicks to get past Real Sociedad last Sunday; indeed, their last three goals have all come from the penalty spot. Almost entirely predictably, there have already been stories about the problems in combining Mbappé with Vinícius Júnior, but there’s a reason why Real are almost always favourites or second favourites to win this competition, and there have been few signs of that balance of power shifting. 


(Cover image from IMAGO)


You can follow every game from the Champions League with FotMob this season — featuring deep stats coverage, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.

Preview: Real Madrid vs. Stuttgart

Stuttgart make their return to the Champions League this week following an absence of 15 years, and they couldn’t have been handed a more daunting place to do so.


By Ian King


They return to European football’s premier competition with a trip to the Bernabéu to play Real Madrid in the first round of ‘Swiss model’ matches which have replaced the group stages from this year on.

But should they be considered callow just because they haven’t played in this competition for some years? They ended last season in the Bundesliga above Bayern Munich as the runners-up to Bayer Leverkusen with a run of just one defeat in their last sixteen league matches and while this season started poorly, with a point from their first two matches, they’ve recovered since by easing through the first round of the DFB-Pokal and recording a convincing 3-1 win at Borussia Mönchengladbach last Saturday.

Coached by Sebastian Hoeneß, who’s the son of the former Stuttgart player Dieter Hoeneß and the nephew of the legendary Uli, this is no team of superstars, with the most familiar name being Deniz Undav, who signed a season-long loan from Brighton last summer, scored 18 goals in the Bundesliga, and made his signing permanent in August. They’re only in 10th place in the current table, but with only three games played so far that doesn’t necessarily tell us very much. 

The array of platinum-plated superstars facing them is, following the arrival of Kylian Mbappé during the summer, more daunting than ever, but that’s not to say that Real Madrid have been particularly glittering so far. They’ve already picked up their first piece of silverware of the season by comfortably beating Atalanta to win the UEFA Super Cup in Warsaw last month, but their form in La Liga has been a little patchier. 

They’ve only won three of their opening five games, with disappointing draws at Mallorca and Las Palmas in their first two away games. They’ve won their last two league matches, but that took two penalty kicks to get past Real Sociedad last Sunday; indeed, their last three goals have all come from the penalty spot. Almost entirely predictably, there have already been stories about the problems in combining Mbappé with Vinícius Júnior, but there’s a reason why Real are almost always favourites or second favourites to win this competition, and there have been few signs of that balance of power shifting. 


(Cover image from IMAGO)


You can follow every game from the Champions League with FotMob this season — featuring deep stats coverage, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.