Barcelona vs Atlético Madrid: The VarVerdict Match Preview
Copa del Rey Semi-Final (2nd Leg) — Tuesday, March 3, 2026 at Spotify Camp Nou
Tonight isn’t just a football match — it’s a pressure-cooker officiating test.
Atlético arrive in Barcelona with a 4–0 first-leg lead, meaning the script is predictable: Barcelona will come out aggressive, Atlético will try to slow the game down, and the referee’s “line” on contact, dissent, and time management could decide everything.
The Officials
Ricardo de Burgos Bengoechea has been appointed for the second leg.
VAR: Daniel Trujillo
Mundo Deportivo reports Daniel Trujillo will be on VAR duty — and specifically notes he recently drew controversy in another high-profile match.
Why this referee appointment matters
De Burgos already officiated a league meeting between these teams this season at Camp Nou, which Barcelona won 3–1.
This will be the 5th Barcelona vs Atlético match of his career, and (per MD) Barcelona have won 3 of the 4 previous meetings under him.
Overall under De Burgos: Barcelona’s record is 28W–1D–5L in 34 matches; Atlético’s is 25W–7D–6L in 38 matches (Atlético are the club he’s overseen most).
VarVerdict angle
This is an official with a long history of handling both clubs — meaning players will test boundaries early because they think they know the line.
The Rivalry Stats
From LaLiga’s official historical numbers (all competitions):
- Total meetings: 250
- Barcelona wins: 113
- Atlético wins: 80
- Draws: 57
- Goals: Barcelona 467, Atlético 370
Discipline trend in this rivalry (cards since 1970):
- Atlético cautions: 415
- Barcelona cautions: 341
- Sending-offs: Barcelona 36, Atlético 38
Copa del Rey history between them:
- Copa meetings: 49
- Barcelona wins: 23
- Atlético wins: 16
- Draws: 10
Why the referee will be the “third headline”
If Barcelona press aggressively, Atlético will look to “invite” contact and draw whistles. Early yellow cards can change the entire tie.
In a comeback scenario, every fall in the box becomes a potential “match-defining moment.” Expect at least one incident that forces VAR to decide whether to send the referee to the monitor.
If Atlético start slowing restarts with a multi-goal cushion, does the referee act early (cards/warnings), or let the tempo die? That decision shapes the crowd, and the crowd shapes the match.
High pressure + big calls = players surrounding the referee. The best refereeing performances tonight will be about calm authority, not just correctness.