Atletico stage late comeback as Suarez winner keeps title hopes alive
Luis Suarez scored the goal that could win Atletico Madrid La Liga when his 88th-minute winner snatched a remarkable 2-1 victory over Osasuna on Sunday after they had looked set to hand the title advantage to Real Madrid.
Atletico trailed with nine minutes to go at the Wanda Metropolitano and faced a defeat that would not just have postponed their bid to be champions but allowed Real Madrid, who were beating Athletic Bilbao, to go top with one game left.
Instead, Atletico scored in the 82nd and 88th minutes to pull off a stunning turnaround. Renan Lodi smashed in an equaliser before Suarez proved the hero, firing in from eight yards to spark mass celebrations.
Atletico's players and substitutes piled onto Suarez. At the full-time whistle, some of their players dropped to their knees, not with ecstasy, but relief, the title just one win away.
To be crowned champions with a game to spare, Atletico needed Real Madrid to slip up at San Mames but Nacho Fernandez put Real ahead in the second half and Atletico's priority quickly became preservation.
Victory maintains their two-point advantage and another win away at Real Valladolid next weekend will guarantee a second league title in 25 years.
Barcelona are out of the running after they lost 2-1 at home to Celta Vigo.
Santi Mina scored twice, including an 89th minute winner for Celta after Lionel Messi scored the opener.
Suarez, who was forced to leave Barca last summer, has scored 20 goals this season and the goal against Osasuna ensured his former team could not win the title.
After more than a year away, fans finally returned to La Liga but only for the two games in the Valencia region, where the coronavirus infection rate has dropped below the target rate set by the government.
At Villarreal the maximum 5,000 fans cheered their team to a 4-0 home victory over high-flying Sevilla.
But 60 kilometres (37 miles) down the Mediterranean coast, Valencia, whose relations with their fans are strained, sold ony 3,000 of the available places. The impact was similar as the home team beat struggling Eibar 4-1.
In Madrid, no fans were allowed in the Wanda Metropolitano, but they gathered outside and cheered as the team bus arrived.
The crowd was several hundred strong by kick-off, and the chanting audible on the pitch.
Atletico had 16 shots in a first half but could not find a way through. The chances came early and they all fell to Suarez early on.
The best of them came from an Angel Correa cross but Suarez took too long and with three Osasuna players in front of him, he could only pick out the post.
Atletico kept coming as Saul Niguez headed over Kieran Trippier's pass.
They might have thought Real Madrid had conceded when a huge cheer came from the fans outside, but it was Barca who had let in an equaliser against Celta Vigo.
All the top three were being held at half-time.
Atletico thought they were ahead on the hour as Stefan Savic finished from Trippier's cross. Fans outside set off two fireworks, but Savic was just offside and the goal was ruled out.
Atletico put the ball in the net again, only for flag to go up again, Carrasco nipping behind too early before powering in.
The flag stayed down at San Mames a few minutes later though as Nacho put Real Madrid ahead in the 68th minute, Karim Benzema, who was offside, failed to control Casemiro's cross and Nacho prodded in.
Real Madrid were going top and seven minutes later, things got worse for Atletico. Ante Budimir was free at the back post to heading in a free kick.
The fans outside were silent.
Atletico coach Diego Simeone brought on two substitutes and they combined to level. Joao Felix scooped a superb pass through for Lodi to thunder in with eight minutes left.
There was hope. In the 88th minute there was joy, Carrasco lingering in the area and pulling back perfectly for Suarez, who arrived late, fired in, and ran to the corner.