Football Today
·7 February 2026
Valencia vs Real Madrid: Title race intensity hits the Mestalla as Madrid hunt seventh straight win

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·7 February 2026

Real Madrid travel to Valencia this weekend knowing that anything less than victory risks loosening their grip on the La Liga title race.
Alvaro Arbeloa’s side arrive at the Mestalla on a six-match league winning run, one that has kept steady pressure on Barcelona at the summit and allowed little margin for error.
With the leaders in action earlier in the weekend, Madrid may already be chasing from behind, sharpening the urgency of the task.
Valencia, meanwhile, approach the fixture in a far less comfortable position.
Carlos Corberan’s side sit just outside the relegation zone, their recent progress checked by back-to-back defeats to Real Betis in the league and Athletic Club in the Copa del Rey.
Both losses came late, both were damaging, and both served as reminders of how thin the margins remain for a side still fighting for stability.
Despite that, Mestalla continues to offer resistance.
Valencia are unbeaten in six home league matches, a run built more on resilience than fluency but valuable nonetheless in a season defined by survival.
They will need that resolve again against a Madrid side whose form has been built on patience and late authority.
Last weekend’s stoppage-time victory over Rayo Vallecano was emblematic.
Madrid dominated long spells without fully convincing, absorbed pressure, and still found a way to win deep into injury time through Kylian Mbappé’s penalty.
It was their sixth straight league victory, and another example of a team collecting points even when performances fluctuate.
That capacity remains central to their title push.
Madrid are also fresher than many of their rivals, having had a full week to prepare after their Copa del Rey exit last month.
Their away record underlines the threat.
Only Barcelona have taken more points on the road this season, and Madrid have not lost a league match away from home since early October.
Recent meetings at Mestalla suggest caution rather than confidence.
Madrid have won just once in their last three visits, with Valencia taking encouragement from narrow margins and familiar surroundings.
That history, combined with Valencia’s desperation for points, points towards a contest shaped by tension rather than control.
For Valencia, this is less about statements and more about survival.
For Madrid, it is about discipline, momentum and refusing to blink in a title race that remains unforgiving.
Different objectives, shared urgency, and little room for error make this a fixture carrying weight well beyond its place on the calendar.








































