- Wind, rain batter Taiwan as Super Typhoon Kong-rey nears
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- Argentina hit by massive transport strike
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- Man Utd hit five to start life after Ten Hag, Man City out of League Cup
- Inter keep pace with Napoli as stuttering Juve lose ground again
- Musiala hits hat-trick as Bayern cruise into German Cup last 16
- Man Utd hit five to start life after Ten Hag, Arsenal, Liverpool into League Cup quarters
- New Hezbollah chief says open to truce with Israel if offer is made
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- Stocks mostly retreat, bitcoin close to record high
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- France court jails ex-doctor in latest Rwandan genocide trial
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- Brussels hopes to advance Ukraine, Moldova entry talks in 2025
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- 'Peace among ourselves' crucial to save nature: UN chief
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Madrid 'suffer' in Leipzig draw to reach Champions League quarters
Real Madrid scraped through into the Champions League quarter-finals with a 1-1 second-leg draw against RB Leipzig on Wednesday, progressing 2-1 on aggregate.
The record 14-time champions were far below their best but did just enough over the two legs of the last-16 clash to edge out their Bundesliga opponents.
Despite Leipzig shading the game, Vinicius Junior opened the scoring in the 65th minute after being set up well by Jude Bellingham.
Willi Orban quickly levelled for the visitors but they could not find a second goal to force extra-time at the Santiago Bernabeu.
Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said his team suffered and did not approach the game well mentally.
"We played badly, with little intensity, with worries ... the psychological aspect conditioned our game a lot," Ancelotti told Movistar.
"We played against an opponent with quality, who had nothing to lose, and we had the brakes on from start to finish -- we suffered, but the important thing was to get to the quarter-finals."
Ancelotti warned his players before the game they needed to be at their best to progress and showed his cautious side by playing four midfielders behind Bellingham and Vinicius.
The Italian brought Aurelien Tchouameni forward into defensive midfield, also deploying Eduardo Camavinga, Fede Valverde and Toni Kroos, as he looked to protect the 1-0 first-leg lead.
However Ancelotti's gameplan stunted Madrid's own attacking game without completely stifling Leipzig's.
"It was not our best day, but we have to be happy because the objective is complete," Madrid captain Nacho Fernandez told Movistar.
"When things don't go as you want, you have to battle, to fight, to play games like today's that make you grow and learn."
The German side had the better of the first half, albeit without carving out clear chances until just before the break.
Andriy Lunin palmed away a strike from Xavi Simons, on loan from Paris Saint-Germain, while Lois Openda rifled a shot into the side netting.
Ancelotti shifted back to a more typical set-up for the second half, introducing Rodrygo at half-time for Camavinga.
It opened up the game at both ends and Vinicius began to have more influence after a quiet first half -- albeit not always for good. The Brazilian was booked for barging Orban in the back and then shoving the Leipzig captain.
- 'So tough' -
Vinicius' frustration quickly turned to joy though when Bellingham burst forward, showing superb timing to release the forward, who fired into the top corner at the end of a smart counter-attack.
Toni Kroos started the break and despite being outnumbered, Bellingham and Vinicius showed their decisive quality to send the hosts ahead.
Madrid's delight was short-lived though, with Orban levelling just three minutes later.
The Hungarian defender's excellent diving header from David Raum's cross set up a gripping denouement.
Madrid striker Joselu, on as a substitute, sent a tame effort at Leipzig goalkeeper Peter Gulacsi before Dani Olmo hit the woodwork.
The former Barcelona youth player's lob dropped on to the crossbar and out of play as thousands of Madrid fans held their breath.
Europe's most crowned side were taken to the wire on a nervy night by Marco Rose's side, only founded in 2009, but steeled themselves and held on to progress.
"If you add the 180 minutes up, we clearly had the better chances -– I don't know how they scored today," Leipzig defender Benjamin Henrichs told DAZN.
"We played so well and it's so tough that we're out."
D.Sawyer--AMWN