Barcelona advanced to the Women's Champions League semi-finals with a 6-0 win over Real Madrid, sealing a 12-2 aggregate success. The quarter-final second leg at Camp Nou saw complete dominance from Pere Romeu's side, who are now targeting a return to the final after last season's narrow defeat to Arsenal at Estadio Jose Alvalade.
Caroline Graham Hansen scored twice in the second leg and stressed that Barcelona are using last year's disappointment as motivation. The Norwegian forward played the entire final against Arsenal and is determined that Barcelona convert this season's strong performances into a major European title.
The Camp Nou crowd witnessed a one-sided contest as Barcelona led 4-0 within 34 minutes on the night, building on a 6-2
first-leg advantage. Alexia Putellas, Irene Paredes, Ewa Pajor and Esmee Brugts also scored, rounding off one of the competition's most lopsided quarter-final ties and extending Barcelona's authority in domestic and European Clasico meetings.
That 12-2 scoreline matched the joint-second highest aggregate total ever recorded in a Women's Champions League quarter-final. Only the 2005-06 tie between FFC Turbine Potsdam and Valur, which produced 21 goals, has seen a greater combined tally. Barcelona also continued a long record of success in the Clasico rivalry across all tournaments.
Across 25 matches against Real Madrid in all competitions, Barcelona have now recorded 24 victories and suffered only one defeat. In cup competitions alone, Barcelona have won all 13 meetings, with a combined score of 51-7. The latest display highlighted a major gap between the sides in knockout football at this stage.
Barcelona's attacking numbers underlined their superiority. Romeu's side produced 33 shots in the second leg, with 14 on target and an expected goals value of 5.36. Madrid managed eight attempts, hitting the target fewer times and generating an expected goals figure of only 1.07 against Barcelona's organised defence.
Barcelona put on a show in front of a sold-out Camp Nou #UWCL pic.twitter.com/TkLeW78lpaUEFA Women's Champions League (@UWCL) April 2, 2026
Next, Barcelona meet Bayern Munich in the semi-finals, with a place in the Women's Champions League showpiece at stake. That route offers a chance to correct the 1-0 loss against Arsenal last season, when Renee Slegers' side edged Barcelona in a tense contest that denied Romeu's squad another European crown.
Hansen reflected on that setback and explained how it is driving Barcelona's current campaign. "Of course, it's part of football. You can play as well as you want all season," Hansen told reporters. "But when it comes down to being there in the final, we weren't last season. So obviously we want to try to reach the final again and show that we can play well in finals again. Because we have done it, and we want to repeat it. "
Romeu highlighted the mindset within the squad, praising the way Barcelona maintained intensity despite the tie being effectively decided early. "I'm privileged to work here but not just for matches like this, nights like we've enjoyed. Privileged because the group is so competitive," Romeu said. "They are hungry to improve. They worked from minute one to 90. When the tie was so wrapped up, it's incredible that my players kept their hunger and intensity to that level. "
"We really have to praise these players of ours. It's going to be difficult to repeat a group like we've got right now. They've won so much, but they never drop their level. They train like they play100% in every training session and every match. That's not easy. That's why we were able to beat a really good opponent like Real Madrid. "
For Real Madrid, the exit marked a second straight quarter-final defeat in the Women's Champions League, following a 3-2 loss to Arsenal in the 2024-25 season. Pau Quesada admitted that Barcelona were clearly stronger across both legs and accepted responsibility for aspects of Madrid's performance in the second match.
"Barcelona just ran over the top of us," Quesada conceded when talking to UEFA.com. "I think they were very superior to us in all areas. We knew that this was a team which, when they have their night, there's little you can do. We did a lot of things which weren't right, and the vast majority of that pertains to my strategy, which I think was wrong. But, we can be self-critical in the coming days. "
Barcelona now carry strong momentum and confidence into the last four, supported by dominant statistics, clinical attacking play and consistent success in high-pressure matches. With Hansen, Putellas and a deep supporting cast in form, Romeu's squad approach the meeting with Bayern Munich knowing that last season's missed chance in Lisbon continues to shape this European push.








