Barcelona Grind, Then Glide Past Oviedo to Retake La Liga Lead
Barcelona are back where they believe they belong. On top of La Liga. The 3–0 scoreline against Real Oviedo suggests comfort. The reality was far more demanding.
After Real Madrid briefly climbed above them with a win over Villarreal, Barcelona responded under pressure and with purpose. Goals from Dani Olmo, Raphinha and a spectacular Lamine Yamal finish settled the contest, but not until patience was tested.
Oviedo arrived at a partially reopened Camp Nou rooted to the bottom of the table. That did not stop them from making life awkward. They defended deep, stayed compact and waited for mistakes. For much of the first half, they got exactly what they wanted.
Barcelona’s passing lacked its usual rhythm. Moves broke down early. The tempo felt stuck in second gear. Pedri, sidelined through injury, watched from the stands, his frustration visible. On the pitch, Hansi Flick’s side searched for clarity and struggled to find it.
Oviedo threatened just enough to keep the home crowd uneasy. Haissem Hassan forced Joan Garcia into a sharp save from distance, while Aaron Escandell stood firm at the other end, denying Raphinha with a strong stop at his near post before the break.
Everything changed after half time.
Barcelona emerged with bite. The press intensified. The ball moved quicker. Within minutes, the resistance cracked. Yamal and Raphinha swarmed inside the box, chaos followed, and Olmo reacted fastest. One touch. One calm finish. Relief swept through the stadium.
From there, control followed confidence.
Oviedo handed Barcelona their second goal with a costly lapse. David Costas played a careless back pass. Raphinha read it early, sprinted through and delicately lifted the ball over Escandell. Ruthless. Efficient. Game shifting.
The moment everyone will remember came next.
Olmo delivered a teasing cross that drifted awkwardly behind Lamine Yamal. Most players would reset. Yamal improvised. He twisted his body and unleashed a stunning sideways scissor kick that flew past the goalkeeper. Technique, bravery and imagination wrapped into one unforgettable strike. Camp Nou roared.
Then the rain arrived. Heavy. Sudden. With no roof yet in place, supporters scrambled for cover. Those who stayed were rewarded with more dominance, even if the fourth goal never came. Escandell produced another fine save to deny Robert Lewandowski late on.
When the final whistle blew, Barcelona had done more than win. They reclaimed first place in La Liga. They showed resilience when flair was missing. And they proved again that even on imperfect nights, quality finds a way.