3D Analysis of the Women's Clásico: Tactical Barça Thrashes Madrid

Published on March 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The FC Barcelona women's team took a decisive step towards the Champions League semifinals with a resounding 2-6 victory at the Alfredo di Stéfano. The match, more analytical than exciting, showed a Real Madrid with a cautious approach and a Barça that, without shining, controlled with absolute solvency. This tactical superiority is the perfect field to apply 3D visualization tools, which allow us to dissect the keys to the match beyond the simple report.

3D diagram of Barça's positions showing their build-up structure and progression channels on the field.

3D Visualization of Tactics and Key Moments 🎯

Through 3D simulation, we can recreate Madrid's initial formation, showing their low block and the distance between lines that invited blaugrana dominance. The technology allows isolating and analyzing in a virtual space Linda Caicedo's double: the trajectory of her shots, the position of the defenses, and the location of the goal. Similarly, Barcelona's positional structure, ball circulation, and movements that generated the goals can be visualized, especially the early ones that psychologically decided the match. This immersive perspective turns abstract tactical concepts into comprehensible visual models.

Simulation as the Ultimate Analysis Tool 🔍

This match demonstrates that modern sports analysis goes beyond flat statistical data. The 3D recreation of the match offers a layer of deep understanding, allowing coaches, analysts, and fans to study replays from any angle, freeze moments, and evaluate decisions. The technology transforms a victory into a case study, where every key action can be broken down to extract valuable tactical lessons, marking the future of elite sports analysis.

How can 3D analysis of positions and tactical movements explain the superiority of FC Barcelona women's team in their 2-6 victory over Real Madrid?

(PS: VAR in 3D: now with replays from angles that didn't even exist)