At a glance
- New Driblab data shared by Cadena SER shows Vinicius Junior beats Mbappé in total distance, high-speed runs, sprints and repeated maximum-intensity actions per 90 minutes.
- Real Madrid average 2.2 non-penalty goals per 90 with Vinicius on the pitch and Mbappé off, compared to just 0.95 with Mbappé on and Vinicius off.
- The data does not condemn Mbappé — it raises a deeper question about whether Real Madrid have found the right structure to get the best from both players at once.
Real Madrid have spent the season trying to make two of the most gifted forwards in the world function as a unit. A new set of physical data suggests the equation is still unsolved – and with El Clásico on the horizon, the debate around Vinicius Junior and Kylian Mbappé has never felt more urgent.
Analysis from Driblab, shared by Cadena SER, cuts through the goals and assists and focuses on something more fundamental: physical effort. In that battle, Vinicius wins clearly. The Brazilian records more total distance, more high-speed running, more sprints and a greater volume of repeated maximum-intensity actions per 90 minutes than Mbappé. The gap is not marginal.
What the Vinicius and Mbappé physical profiles actually reveal
The distinction is not simply that Vinicius runs more. It is what that running means for how Real Madrid function as a team.
Vinicius operates through volume and repetition. He attacks, resets, presses and goes again – constantly stretching the defensive shape and forcing opponents to make decisions. That relentless rhythm gives Madrid a pulse in games where they are not at their best, as his two goals against Espanyol made plain, keeping the club mathematically alive and delaying Barcelona’s title party.
Mbappé, by contrast, is selective. He conserves energy and chooses his moments, typically arriving late and close to goal. That is not a flaw – it’s a profile, and one that produces goals at an elite rate. But it creates a different collective effect on the team around him.
Real Madrid’s goal data with and without Mbappé
The physical numbers are striking. The goal data is harder to look away from.
According to Antón Meana’s report on El Larguero, Real Madrid average 1.85 non-penalty goals per 90 minutes across the season. With Mbappé on the pitch and Vinicius off, that figure drops to 0.95. With Vinicius playing and Mbappé absent, it rises to 2.2.
The temptation is to read that as a verdict on Mbappé. It is not. Football does not work that cleanly, and a player of his quality cannot simply be declared a negative for a team. What the numbers do suggest is a structural problem: Real Madrid have not yet built an attacking ecosystem in which both players amplify each other rather than cancel each other out.
Whether Real Madrid can solve the Vinicius-Mbappé problem before it costs them
The questions worth asking are not about individual talent. They are about the collective effects. Does the press lose its intensity when Mbappé plays? Does the attack slow down? Does Vinicius receive the ball in worse positions? Does the midfield carry more defensive responsibility?
None of those questions have simple answers. But all of them matter more than debating who has the better season in isolation.
El Clásico arrives with Barcelona capable of winning LaLiga on the night. Real Madrid arrive with a season’s worth of uncertainty behind them. If Mbappé is fit, the coaching staff must decide how to use him. If Vinicius continues his current form, he has to be the reference point around which the attack is built.
The data does not say Vinicius and Mbappé cannot play together. It says Real Madrid have not yet made them better together than they are apart. That is the problem that matters most – and it has not been solved yet.



