Spain's footballing world spun like a raging storm.
Two matchdays had passed, but already, Barcelona and Real Madrid towered above the league like twin giants staring each other down across a battlefield.
Both clubs were always the giants, but this season seemed different. This season, both clubs seem to have just that little more fire, that little more heart. And to the rest of the league, it was ominous.
Every pundit, every journalist, every whisper in cafes and locker rooms circled back to one inevitable truth: the collision was coming.
It was a media frenzy.
Sports programs filled entire nights dissecting every frame of Barca's pressing trap, Madrid's lightning counters, Samuel Moses's godlike goals, and Mbappe's polished and clinical ruthlessness.
*Marca (Madrid): "Madrid's White Empire Awakens – Alonso's Machine Hunts Treble".
*Sport (Barcelona): "Flick's Pressing Storm Turns Europe's Eyes Back to Spotify Camp Nou".
*AS: "Mbappe vs Moses – The Rivalty Football New Knew It Needed".
*Mundo Deportivo: "October 26 – The Day Spanish Football Will Tremble".
On late night football debates, the volume hit fever pitch:
[Edu Aguirre: "Madrid has five, Barca has four… goals don't lie. This is Alonso's year. Fate has spoken. Barca will come close, really close, but we will edge them in the end."]
[Cristobal Soria: (slamming fist) "And yet, every time Moses touches a ball, defenders pray! Madridistas know it, every football fan with a brain knows it, they fear the Football God."]
Clips of heated exchanges drew millions of views.
Social media became a battlefield of gifs, memes, and fiery debates. For lots of Spanish football fans, never have a season been this fiery at just the beginning stages since the Cristiano Ronaldo vs Lionel Messi era.
It didn't stop there. To give their club the edge, players of both Spanish giants went lengths to fuel the rage of mind games.
Even off the pitch, the rivalry sharpened.
In a Brazilian talk show, Vinicius laughed. "I love Barca fans saying Sam Moses is unstoppable. Relax. If I remember correctly, they were saying the same thing about Yamal at some point".
With the right amount of arrogance, he leaned forward, a smirk tugging at his lips as he said. "We've got Mbappe, me, Jude… unstoppable isn't even a word until we show them at the Bernabeu. They think this is last season? Think again".
Jude Bellingham, also did his bit in a quick Instagram Live, fanning the flames of war between the 2 top Spanish clubs.
"Flick's high line? We'll tear through it like tissue paper". He said.
Sam, speaking to UEFA.com, was calm as ever. "Pressure doesn't bother me. If anything, I welcome it. That's where legends are made".
"I may be just 21 now". He smiled knowingly. "By the way, to those who don't know, I celebrated my birthday on August 6th, so yeah, I'm 21 now".
"Well, like I said, I may be just 21, but I have experience. I've been doubted in my home country at the NPFL, even more in the English Premier League with Fulham, but every time, I relish and dine in the joy of proving doubters wrong".
"This season won't be any different".
…
August was gone.
And now, September brought more fuel to the fire; the UEFA Champions League draw. September didn't just bring whispers of Europe's return, like last season, it continued the dawn of a new Champions League era.
Gone were the traditional groups. The 2026/2027 season continued last season's introduction of the league phase:
36 teams in total, four pots based on UEFA coefficient, each club plays 8 matches, 2 vs each pot, avoiding domestic opponents.
The top 8 teams automatically advance to the Round of 16, while teams ranked 9th to 24th fight through a playoff round.
FC Barcelona, defending champions were part of the confirmed Pot 1 Giants, alongside Real Madrid, Manchester City, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Paris Saint Germain, Inter Milan, Chelsea, and Borussia Dortmund.
29 of the 39 spots were already confirmed, with the last 7 teams battling through qualifiers to finalize the pots.
As reigning champions and Pot 1 leaders, Barcelona would not face any other Pot 1 clubs. Instead, their 8 opponents would be:
2 teams from Pot 2, potentially Juventus, Atletico Madrid, Napoli, etc…
2 teams from Pot 3, potentially RB Leipzig, Porto, Benfica, etc…
2 teams from Pot 4, emerging sides like Celtic, Shakhtar, or qualifierse.
And then the 2 wildcard draws outside these pots.
The same structure applied to Real Madrid, ensuring both Spanish giants had to face a variety of Europe's elite.
It was already a full season since the change was implemented, and yet, it still sent shockwaves through the footballing world.
*Sky Sports: "UEFA's New Battlefield – No Groups, Only Survival".
*ESPN: "Barca, Madrid, City: Who Will Conquer the League Phase?"
*Thiery Henry: "The margin for error is gone. With eight matches against Europe's best, even a god can fall".
UEFA's trailer set the stage with cinematic drama; footage of Sam's last-season bicycle kick, Mbappe's lightning runs, Haaland's thundering goals, and Lewandowski's iconic headers, ending with:
"36 Teams. 8 Battles. 1 King of Europe".
…
Barcelona's next match would take them away to Villarreal, a notoriously hostile ground where the Yellow Submarine's fans sang for ninety minutes straight. Hansi Flick warned his squad during training.
"Every away game will feel like a final. Crowds will hate you because you're gods walking among men".
"Embrace it, silence them".
Meanwhile, Madrid faced Athletic Bilbao at San Mames, where Basque passion burned like wildfire. Alonso's calm demeanor belied the cauldron his team would face.
"San Mames is no place for arrogance. We go to war".
Despite the hustle and bubble of the rushing football season, attention never once left the looming shadow of the distant El Clasico…
And even though October 26 felt far off, the rivalry loomed like a thundercloud. Spanish sports radio ran polls:
["Who wins the first Clasico?" – 52% Barcelona, 48% Madrid."]
["Who's the better player now: Moses or Mbappe?" – 60% Moses, 40% Mbappe."]
But perhaps the most chilling words came from Xabi Alonso, uttered during a quiet post-training press briefing.
"Barcelona plays like a storm… but Madrid is the empire that survives storms. Come October 26th, we will prove it".
The words echoed across Spain, a gauntlet thrown at Camp Nou's gates.
In Barcelona's training ground that evening, Sam heard the quote on his phone. He simply smiled, tying his boots tighter.
The war for La Liga and Europe was no longer approaching… it was already here.