Real Madrid’s season has descended into something close to farce. Disciplinary proceedings have been opened against Federico Valverde and Aurelien Tchouameni after Valverde was taken to hospital with a head injury following a fight at training, with the whole saga unfolding just days before a 2-0 defeat to Barcelona at the Camp Nou which sealed the La Liga title for Real’s hated rivals.
The pair had actually been involved in a first altercation earlier in the week, which was broken up in the dressing room. When Valverde then reportedly refused to shake Tchouameni’s hand the following morning, the tension carried into the next day’s session. Media reports state that the fight broke out at the end of training following a practice match involving heavy challenges, with the pair continuing their dispute back in the changing room. The most detailed account circulating suggests Tchouameni eventually snapped after sustained pressure from his teammate, knocking Valverde to the ground. Valverde then caught his head on a table, required stitches, and was taken from the dressing room in a wheelchair.

Valverde’s subsequent 425-word statement, in which he insisted at no point had his teammate hit him and that a “small cut” came from accidentally hitting a table, only made the story bigger. Real Madrid’s own statement was blunter, diagnosing Valverde with a traumatic brain injury and noting he faces up to two weeks out. The club held a crisis meeting. Barcelona watched on from the top of La Liga, barely needing to do anything other than sit back and watch the chaos unfold as they prepared to seal the title in El Clasico this weekend.
The dispute between Tchouameni and Valverde was a spectacular meltdown, especially in the build-up to a pivotal match watched the world over, but it’s not an unprecedented one. These things happen in football more often than clubs would like to admit, and occasionally they become legendary.
John Hartson vs Eyal Berkovic, West Ham, 1998
The one that established the genre. A training ground camera caught Hartson kicking Berkovic in the head after the Israeli swung an arm at him following a heavy challenge. It was the first time a player had been formally charged with misconduct for a training ground incident. Hartson was fined £20,000 and has since called it the biggest regret of his career, saying he still doesn’t know why he reacted the way he did. The footage is as shocking to watch now as it was then. The fact that it was filmed at all, accidentally, is part of what made it so defining. Every training ground fight since has existed partly in its shadow.
Craig Bellamy vs John Arne Riise, Liverpool, 2007
During a warm-weather training camp in Portugal ahead of Liverpool‘s Champions League tie with Barcelona, Bellamy entered Riise’s hotel room after a team night out and attacked the Norwegian left-back with a golf club. Riise later said he feared for his career. Bellamy then scored against Barcelona and celebrated with a mock golf swing, making very clear how sincere his apology had been. It remains the most theatrical of all the great teammate fights, a story almost too absurd to be real. Bellamy, naturally, was not dropped.
Lee Bowyer vs Kieron Dyer, Newcastle, 2005
Newcastle were already 3-0 down to Aston Villa and reduced to ten men when Bowyer and Dyer decided to fight each other on the pitch at St James’s Park. In front of a full stadium, on live television, in the middle of an active match. Both were sent off. Bowyer received a seven-game ban and was pressured into a public apology. Manager Graeme Souness, a man who had seen a few things in his time, said he had never witnessed anything like it. The opponents trying to separate two players from the same team is an image that has never really been matched.
Joey Barton vs Ousmane Dabo, Manchester City, 2007
Dabo was left unconscious and covered in blood after being repeatedly punched by Barton during a Manchester City training session. He sustained a detached retina and pressed charges. Barton was eventually jailed for four months after Dabo won his case in court, and paid compensation for the injuries. This one crossed the line from football incident into criminal matter, and it sits in a different category to most of the others as a result.
Sadio Mane vs Leroy Sane, Bayern Munich, 2023
Mane was furious about something Sane had done during Bayern‘s 3-0 defeat to Manchester City and confronted him in the dressing room after the game, with Sane later seen sporting a bust lip. Bayern announced both players apologised to their teammates. Mane was sold to Saudi Arabia that summer. Sometimes a training ground fight tells you exactly where a player’s head is, and his was clearly already out the door.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic vs Oguchi Onyewu, AC Milan, 2010
A fight during Milan training left Onyewu with a broken rib. Zlatan later claimed that without their teammates’ intervention, they would have killed each other. Knowing Ibrahimovic, this may be only a mild exaggeration. He has form: at Barcelona, he clashed repeatedly with Pep Guardiola, and his time at PSG, Inter, and Juventus all produced stories of training ground friction with teammates and staff. Some players raise the temperature of a dressing room. Zlatan has spent his entire career doing exactly that.
The bigger picture at Real Madrid
What made the Valverde-Tchouameni incident particularly damaging isn’t just the physical escalation. It’s the context. The week had already produced reports of six players refusing to speak to manager Alvaro Arbeloa, a separate altercation between Antonio Rudiger and Alvaro Carreras, and a petition to have Kylian Mbappe sold that had reached 30 million signatures.
The club will end the season trophyless, and now enters the 2026-27 season with uncertainty about personnel, management and direction. Jose Mourinho’s potential return to the Bernabeu next season could fan the flames even further after the Portuguese played his part in a tempestuous Champions League tie earlier this year. While no club endures drama quite like Real Madrid, this season’s debacle is indicative of unrest rarely seen even behind the scenes at Valdebebas.
Training ground fights are a symptom, rarely the disease. When results are good and the dressing room is ticking, heavy challenges stay on the pitch and grievances get resolved quietly. It’s when the season starts rotting at the edges that things spill over. The very best of these incidents, from Bellamy’s golf club to Bowyer and Dyer swinging at each other while wearing the same shirt, tend to happen at clubs already in some kind of trouble. Real Madrid, right now, fits that description perfectly.

