The pressure arrives at the stadium before the referee does.
In the long theater of Spanish football, grievances are rarely new — only newly spoken. Atlético Madrid's reaction to formal complaints lodged by Barcelona and Real Madrid over refereeing decisions is less a rebuttal than a mirror held up to a rivalry defined by unequal power and unequal patience. The Rojiblancos, who believe they have quietly absorbed institutional disadvantage for years, now find themselves watching the game's most privileged clubs reach for the complaint form — and they are not inclined to stay quiet about the irony.
- Barcelona's formal UEFA protest over a refereeing incident against Atlético has landed at the Metropolitano not as a provocation, but as something almost laughable to those inside the club.
- Atlético officials believe both Barcelona and Real Madrid systematically use their vast media platforms to pressure referees before and after matches — a pattern they call a 'working approach' with barely disguised contempt.
- The wound beneath the surface is the Julián Álvarez penalty incident from last season's Champions League shootout, which UEFA later acknowledged was mishandled — and which Atlético absorbed in silence while Real Madrid advanced.
- Atlético is carefully separating its own procedural request for clarification from Barcelona's complaint, insisting theirs was specific and principled, not a deflection of responsibility for a defeat.
- The club has no plans to issue a formal response, letting the contrast between their own silence last season and Barcelona's current noise make the argument for them.
There is a particular kind of frustration that comes not from being wronged, but from watching someone else complain about what you have quietly endured for years. That is the atmosphere inside Atlético Madrid following Barcelona's formal complaint to UEFA over a refereeing decision in their recent encounter — an incident Atlético considers incidental and the complaint itself something far less innocent.
According to Marca, Atlético officials were genuinely taken aback. Their position is simple: a club of Barcelona's technical quality should not need to explain away a defeat by pointing at a referee. The club will not issue an official response. The incident, in their view, was a fluke. The complaint is something else.
But the irritation runs deeper than one match. Inside the club, there is long-standing resentment toward what they describe as a systematic pattern — the way Barcelona and Real Madrid use their enormous media presence to apply pressure on referees across the entire week surrounding a fixture. Diego Simeone has been vocal on this, and those around him use the phrase 'working approach' to describe it, a term that carries a pointed implication about intent.
Atlético is also careful to distinguish Barcelona's UEFA filing from their own procedural request to the Referees' Technical Committee — submitted after Gerard Martín's red card was overturned in a way they felt contradicted an earlier ruling. They accepted the committee's explanations, even while feeling aggrieved.
The sharpest question being asked inside the club, with barely concealed sarcasm, concerns the Julián Álvarez penalty from last season's Champions League shootout — a spot-kick UEFA later acknowledged should have been re-taken, one that helped eliminate Atlético at Real Madrid's hands. Atlético filed nothing. They moved on. The contrast with Barcelona's current posture, they are happy to let speak for itself.
What the episode ultimately reveals is less about any single call and more about the enduring tension between Spain's two dominant clubs and everyone else — a tension Atlético, more than most, has made a habit of naming out loud.
There is a particular kind of irritation that comes not from being wronged, but from watching someone else complain about the very thing you have quietly endured for years. That, in essence, is the mood inside Atlético Madrid right now.
When Barcelona filed a formal complaint with UEFA last Thursday — protesting a refereeing decision they believed had directly altered the outcome of their match against Atlético — the reaction at the Wanda Metropolitano was not anger, exactly. It was something closer to disbelief edged with contempt. According to the Spanish newspaper Marca, Atlético officials were genuinely taken aback that a club of Barcelona's resources and talent would reach for the complaint form over what the Rojiblancos consider a minor, incidental moment — the so-called 'Marc Bopel' incident — that they insist had no meaningful bearing on the match.
Atlético has no intention of issuing an official response to Barcelona's statement. The club's position is straightforward: a team of Barcelona's technical quality should not need to explain away a defeat by pointing at a referee. The incident, in Atlético's reading, was a fluke. The complaint, in their view, is something else entirely.
But the frustration runs deeper than this single episode. Inside the club, there is a long-simmering resentment toward what Atlético officials describe as a systematic pattern — the way both Barcelona and Real Madrid, through their enormous media platforms, apply pressure on referees before, during, and after matches. The argument is not subtle: referees arrive on matchday already having absorbed days of scrutiny, doubt, and implied criticism from the two most powerful clubs in Spanish football. Atlético believes that pressure shapes decisions, whether consciously or not.
Diego Simeone has been vocal on this point, criticising both clubs for what he sees as undue influence on officiating. The manager's frustration is shared by those around him, who use the phrase 'working approach' to describe how the giants operate — a term that carries a clear implication about intent.
Atlético is also careful to distinguish between Barcelona's UEFA complaint and their own formal request for clarification, which they submitted to the Referees' Technical Committee after the red card shown to Gerard Martín was overturned. That request was specific and procedural: Atlético argued the decision contradicted the explanation given for a comparable incident in the Betis versus Rayo Vallecano match, and they cited post-derby social media activity as evidence of what they called Barcelona's 'media machine' at work. The club ultimately accepted the committee's explanations, even while maintaining they had been hard done by in the league encounter.
The sharpest edge in Atlético's current posture, though, is reserved for a question their insiders are asking with barely concealed sarcasm. How, they want to know, would Barcelona or Real Madrid have responded to the Julián Álvarez penalty situation — the spot-kick during the Champions League shootout last season that UEFA subsequently acknowledged should have been re-taken rather than recorded as a miss — the one that helped knock Atlético out at the hands of Real Madrid? The implication is plain: Atlético absorbed that, filed no complaint with European football's governing body, and moved on. The contrast with Barcelona's current posture is one they are happy to let speak for itself.
What this episode reveals is less about any single refereeing call and more about the ongoing tension between Spain's two dominant clubs and the rest of La Liga — a tension Atlético, more than most, has made a point of naming out loud. Whether Barcelona's UEFA complaint produces any formal outcome remains to be seen. But the conversation it has sparked at the Metropolitano is one that has clearly been waiting for an occasion to surface.
Citas Notables
Simeone has criticised both Spanish football giants for applying undue pressure on referees through their media platforms.— Diego Simeone, Atlético Madrid manager, as reported by Marca
Atlético officials argue that Barcelona's complaint over the Marc Bopel incident seizes on a minor detail that had no effect on the match result.— Atlético Madrid club sources, via Marca
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
What's actually driving Atlético's reaction here — is it really about this one incident?
Not really. The incident itself is almost beside the point. What you're seeing is years of accumulated frustration finding a convenient moment to speak.
Frustration about what, specifically?
About the idea that Barcelona and Real Madrid set the terms of every refereeing conversation in Spain. That their media weight arrives at the stadium before the referee does.
Atlético filed their own complaint not long ago, though. Doesn't that undercut their position?
They'd say no — and the distinction matters to them. Their request was procedural, asking for consistency with a comparable decision in another match. Barcelona went straight to UEFA with a formal protest.
What's the Julián Álvarez penalty story they keep bringing up?
Last season's Champions League shootout against Real Madrid. UEFA later said the penalty should have been re-taken rather than counted as a miss. Atlético went out. They didn't file a complaint.
So they're holding that up as a kind of moral contrast?
Exactly. The unspoken argument is: we absorbed something worse and said nothing. Now you're complaining about a fluke.
Does Simeone's public criticism of both clubs change the dynamic at all?
It sharpens it. He's not just letting officials speak — he's putting his name to the accusation that these clubs pressure referees as a matter of strategy.
Where does this go from here?
Probably nowhere formal. But the next contentious call involving any of these three clubs will land in a room already full of this conversation.