Real Madrid is in absolute chaos. In a shocking turn of events, midfielders Federico Valverde and Aurélien Tchouaméni reportedly erupted into a violent physical altercation inside the team’s locker room—one so fierce that Valverde ended up in the hospital with a gash on his head after slamming into a table.
This isn’t the first time these two have clashed, but it is by far the most serious. Sources confirm that disciplinary proceedings have already been opened, and maximum punishments are expected. For a club already reeling from a trophy-less season and early Champions League exits, this is a nightmare.
Meanwhile, Kylian Mbappe was spotted laughing as he left training—a surreal image against the backdrop of internal war. The French superstar has become the team’s scapegoat, with an online petition demanding his exit amassing over 30 million signatures. But the real problem isn’t Mbappe—it’s a squad tearing itself apart.
Real Madrid’s legendary ability to manage superstar egos has finally backfired. With Xabi Alonso gone and interim manager Álvaro Arbeloa unable to steady the ship, the club faces a leadership vacuum. A strict disciplinarian like José Mourinho could restore order—or, given his own volatile nature, ignite an even bigger fire.
The dream solution? Zinedine Zidane. But the French icon has reportedly already agreed to take over his national team after the 2026 World Cup, slamming that door shut. As the season spirals, one question echoes through the Bernabéu: who can save Real Madrid from itself?
