CourtFrame
Euroleague
Tuesday, March 24, 2026 • Movistar Arena
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Total
Real Madrid2421262192
Hapoel Tel-Aviv1916252383

Team Statistics

StatReal MadridHapoel Tel-Aviv
Field Goals20/3825/44
3-Pointers9/237/23
Rebounds3628
Assists1718
Steals53
Blocks51
Turnovers119

Game Recap

Real Madrid didn’t need late-game drama to make a statement — just four quarters of control. Behind a steady offensive cadence and timely separation before halftime, Madrid beat Hapoel Tel-Aviv 92-83 on March 24, 2026, at Movistar Arena, improving to 21-12 and keeping pressure on the crowded EuroLeague table.

Game flow: Madrid’s first-half cushion decides it

Madrid set the tone early, winning the opening quarter 24-19 and never letting the game fully tilt back. The second quarter was the hinge: Madrid again won the period, 21-16, to take a 45-35 lead into the break.

Hapoel responded with its best punch out of halftime, taking the third quarter 25-26 close enough to keep the margin within reach. But Madrid matched the urgency with a 26-point third of its own, maintaining a two-possession-plus buffer entering the fourth.

The final period turned into a controlled exchange. Hapoel won the fourth quarter 23-21, but the math never flipped — Madrid’s early work and consistent scoring across all four quarters carried the night.

Turning point: the second quarter squeeze

This game was decided in the margins, and Madrid built them in the second quarter. Winning that stretch by five (21-16) pushed the halftime gap to 10 — the cleanest separation either team generated across the night. From there, every Hapoel run required multiple stops and multiple makes, and Madrid consistently answered enough to keep the possession game in its favor.

Stat lens: ball movement stays even, scoring edge doesn’t

Assists were essentially a wash — Hapoel finished with 18 assists to Madrid’s 17 — a sign that both offenses were able to generate structure and shared creation. The difference was Madrid’s ability to turn that offense into a 92-point output while keeping Hapoel at 83, a nine-point gap that mirrored the halftime margin.

What it means going forward

Madrid’s win, paired with its 21-12 record and recent form (WLWWW), reinforces its ability to bank results even when the opponent stays connected into the fourth. For Hapoel Tel-Aviv (20-12, LWWWW), the loss snaps momentum in a tightly packed part of the standings — and underscores how costly a flat second quarter can be in a road environment like Movistar Arena.