Biggest UEFA Champions League Upset Ever? Sheriff Tiraspol Shocks Real Madrid as +2800 (29.00) Underdogs

Pictures by Getty Images.

The entire team from Transnistria collapsed to the ground when the whistle blew at the Bernabeu in Madrid, as if what just transpired was too ridiculous to believe.

Sheriff Tiraspol — a team located in an unrecognized state, one of the poorest in Europe — had just beaten European titans Real Madrid 2-1 at their vaunted home ground.

It’s Sheriff’s first-ever season in the Champions League.

They’re from the city of Tiraspol in Transnistria, a tiny strip of land between Moldova and Ukraine that has remained unrecognized by the international community for over 30 years.

To give you an idea about how minuscule this state is, the club and the conglomerate that own Sheriff represents an absurd 60% of the state’s annual GDP.

The team’s entire salary is somewhere in the ballpark of $14 million. Compare that to Madrid’s hundreds of millions of dollars in wages.

It’s a rag-tag group of players originally from lower leagues across Europe, Africa and Latin America — most of whom were leased, loaned or gifted to the minnow club.

And yet, with that roster, here they are, sitting atop Group D in the Champions League, three points clear of Real Madrid and five points clear of Serie A side Inter Milan.

It’s perhaps the biggest upset in European club history.

Yes, some other individual upsets may have had greater meaning.

Celtic beating Barcelona 2-1 in 2012 in Scotland or Deportivo de La Coruna beating defending champions AC Milan 4-0 in the 2004 quarterfinals of the competition come to mind.

But none of those teams came from a league — a country — quite as unheralded and unheard-of as the Divizia Națională and Transnistria are.

And none of those wins came against Europe’s most successful football club.

Sheriff came into the game with +2800 odds to win the game at FanDuel, the longest odds to win in the Champions League since the U.S. Supreme Court approved sports betting in 2018.

Real Madrid had been -1000 favorites. The draw sat at +1000.

Sheriff took the lead with a counterattack goal from Uzbekistani striker Jasrubek Yakhshiboev.

The strategy all night was to sit back on defense then pounce when the opportunity presented itself. It worked beautifully on this quick transition to Brazilian winger Cristiano to open the scoring.

Then, Greek goalkeeper Giorgos Athanasiadis kept Sheriff in the game with a series of amazing stops.

Athanasiadis is the unsung hero of this game. Though Real Madrid put up 3.29 expected goals against Sheriff, they scored zero goals in open play. The Greek keeper played a massive part in that.

Real eventually got their goal back after knocking on the door for the entire second half. Karim Benzema buried a penalty after a borderline VAR call gave Madrid the break it needed.

As the clock ticked down, most minnows would have been resigned to time-waste and take the draw. For some of the last 20 minutes of play, it looked like that’s what the little club from Transnistria was trying to do.

Then, Sheriff did this instead:

Real came close again in the waning minutes, but Sheriff put the game away — then collapsed in utter elation.

Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus are the last three holdouts from an asinine plan from earlier this year to break off and create a closed-off Super League.

Today’s match is a clear indication as to why Real want to do so — and why it’s such a terrible idea.

The must-have app for Soccer bettors

The best soccer betting scoreboard

Free picks from proven pros

Live win probabilities for your bets

Leave a Reply