Real Madrid travel to Almaty, Kazakhstan, to face Kairat this Tuesday, in the Champions League league phase in a clash that has already entered history before the ball even rolls.
Real Madrid travel to Almaty, Kazakhstan, to face Kairat this Tuesday, in the Champions League league phase in a clash that has already entered history before the ball even rolls.
On one side, the greatest European champions, holders of 15 continental titles and a squad valued in billions of euros. On the other, an absolute debutant, who celebrate just being among the giants. There are more than 6,400 kilometres, countless financial and sporting differences, but also a cultural clash that helps explain why this is considered the biggest gap in the competition.
Real Madrid ‘frighten’ Kairat in Champions League
Founded in 1902, Real Madrid have never left the Spanish top flight and have 36 La Liga titles, in addition to being the club that has won the Champions League the most times, with 15 titles.
Kairat, meanwhile, were born in 1954, in the Soviet period, and were the only representative of Kazakhstan to compete in the elite of the former USSR league. Their best result was seventh place in 1986. After the country’s independence in 1991, the club grew locally, and now have four national titles, including that of 2024, which took them to this unprecedented group stage.
Whilst Madrid begin their 56th European campaign, with more than 500 matches played and 1,101 goals scored, Kairat make their debut in the competition with a 4-1 defeat to Sporting. The discrepancy in experience is such that Los Merengues alone have won 5% of all matches ever played in Champions League history.
Kairat vs. Real Madrid: Trophies, squad and stars
Real Madrid have accumulated an impressive 133 official trophies, 15 of them continental. Kairat have 19 conquests in total, the majority in domestic tournaments, such as the 10 Kazakhstan Cups.
The difference is also seen in the market: whilst the Madrid squad is valued at £1.2bn, that of the Kazakhs reaches £11.1m – less than half of Kylian Mbappe’s annual salary.
Behind the scenes in transfers, the abyss repeats itself. Madrid invested around €100m (£87.3m) in stars such as Eden Hazard and Jude Bellingham. Kairat made their most expensive purchase in 2020, paying £855,000 for Polish player Jacek Goralski, who left the club without goals or assists.
Support and stadiums: from global power to local pride
This is the moment Kairat Almaty players discovered they will play Real Madrid at home in the UEFA Champions League…
Tonight will be an absolutely huge moment for the whole club and fans. ??❤️ pic.twitter.com/U0rg1vahBy
— EuroFoot (@eurofootcom) September 30, 2025
If on the pitch the numbers impress, off it the contrast is even greater. Real Madrid are considered the most popular club on the planet, with half a billion supporters and hundreds of millions of followers on social media. Kairat have around 400,000 followers, a number that still grew after the unprecedented qualification.
The stage also highlights the differences. The renovated Santiago Bernabeu, valued at almost £1.7bn, accommodates more than 83,000 people. The Central Stadium of Almaty has capacity for 25,000 supporters and an average attendance close to 8,000, a level similar to clubs in the lower divisions of England.
More than a simple sporting duel, Kairat versus Real Madrid is the living portrait of the abyss that separates a debutant from a historic giant. For the Kazakhs, it is the most important match of their trajectory. For the Spanish, another night in the competition they have dominated since 1955.
This article was originally published on Trivela.