Special Reports

LALIGA: Adams ends goal drought as Sevilla boost survival hopes with Atlético win

Adams helped his Sevilla side defeat Atletico Madrid 2-1.

Under the floodlights of the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium, where pressure has become a weekly companion rather than a visitor, Akor Adams stepped forward with the composure of a man who understands what is at stake and what legacy demands. He helped his Sevilla side defeat Atletico Madrid 2-1.

And in moments like this, survival needs a striker with nerve.

Saturday night’s clash against Atletico Madrid was more than just another La Liga fixture—it was a collision of ambition and desperation. For Sevilla, every point is oxygen. For Atletico, every slip is costly.

Amid that tension, three Nigerian names echoed across the team sheets.

Akor Adams led the line with purpose. Ademola Lookman would later enter the contest in the 71st minute, while Chidera Ejuke watched from the bench, an unused option for the visitors.

But this night belonged to Adams.

Ending the drought, delivering when it matters

There is a difference between scoring and scoring when it matters most.

Adams had gone three games without a goal; silent outings against Barcelona, Valencia, and Real Oviedo had raised quiet questions.

On Saturday, he answered loudly.

Ten minutes in, he stepped up from the penalty spot calm, measured, unflinching. No theatrics. Just conviction. The net rippled, and with it, Sevilla breathed.

It wasn’t just a goal. It was a reset.

Atletico Madrid are not built to fold. Even in unfamiliar discomfort, they respond with structure and belief.

Late in the first half, young Javier Bonar dragged them level, silencing the early roar inside the stadium and reminding Sevilla that survival is never handed out; it is earned.

But this Sevilla side, fragile at times this season, showed something different.

Just before the break, Nemanja Gudelj struck with authority to restore the lead. It was a goal that did more than tilt the scoreline; it shifted the mood, showing control, composure, and a statement of intent.

The second half was not about chaos; it was about control.

Sevilla dictated the rhythm, managed the spaces, and protected their advantage with maturity. Adams remained central to everything, linking play, stretching Atletico’s defence, and embodying the fight required in a relegation battle.

By the time he was replaced by Batista Mendy in the 94th minute, his job was done—the damage inflicted. The statement was made.

This has not been a season of comfort for Sevilla. A club accustomed to European nights now finds itself navigating the harsh realities of a relegation scrap in La Liga.

That is where players like Akor Adams become more than contributors; they become symbols.

His numbers now read eight league goals and three assists in 26 appearances. But beyond the statistics lies something deeper: reliability under pressure.

For a team fighting to stay afloat, that is priceless.

For Adams, this is more than form; it is trajectory.

A striker judged not just by goals, but by timing, resilience, and impact. Breaking a drought against a heavyweight like Atletico Madrid, in a game loaded with consequence, is how reputations are built.

Sevilla’s fight is far from over.

But with Akor Adams finding his voice again, their survival story just gained a sharper edge and a striker ready to lead it.

While Adams is chasing survival with Sevilla, he also has a chance for personal glory with his nomination for the Sporty LALIGA African Player of the Year.