Zinedine Zidane's men clinched the Liga title on the final day with 2-0 over Malaga at La Rosaleda.
Madrid claimed the trophy despite taking just one point from their two Clasico encounters with Barcelona.
Here we look at five reasons why Los Blancos emerged victorious in the title race.
Zidane making the most of his squad
Zidane has succeeded this season while doing what had previously been considered unthinkable, resting Ronaldo.
The Frenchman has played Ronaldo for just 2,544 minutes this season –
compared to 3,183 in 2015-16, and the result has enabled the Portugal
superstar to perform when it matters most.
Meanwhile, Marco Asensio and Lucas Vazquez have blossomed into key contributors.
The establishment of Isco as a first-team regular has put the kibosh
on talk of a move to pastures new and, though Alvaro Morata remains a
reportedly frustrated figure at the club, the fact he has still found
the net 15 times in LaLiga this season is testament to Zidane's ability
to get the make the most of his squad.
Crucial Casemiro and marvellous Marcelo
While Ronaldo is the headline maker in the vast majority of Madrid
games, their success this campaign could not have been achieved without
the Brazilian duo of Casemiro and Marcelo.
Outstanding in last year's Champions League final with Atletico
Madrid, Casemiro has continued to thrive under Zidane's tutelage,
excelling at winning the ball back and allowing Madrid's perhaps more
aesthetically pleasing midfielders like Toni Kroos and Luka Modric to
dictate play.
In the 40 games Madrid have played with Casemiro in all competitions
this season, they have a win rate of 75.6 per cent, without him that
drops to 66.7.
Marcelo's impact has been easier to identify to the naked eye, the
left-back leading Europe's top five leagues in assists from defenders
and providing service that has been pivotal to Madrid's forward line and
Ronaldo in particular.
Barca's surprising stumbles
While Barca have hit a rich vein of form following their thrilling
3-2 Clasico triumph at the Santiago Bernabeu last month, stumbles have
been unusually frequent in Luis Enrique's final season in charge.
The Catalans have been particularly vulnerable away from home, losing
to Celta Vigo, Deportivo La Coruna and Malaga and drawing at Real
Betis.
Barca's home defeat to Alaves in September was certainly detrimental,
as was a run of four draws in six games in mid-season, which included a
1-1 stalemate with Madrid at Camp Nou, and those slip-ups rendered what
could have been a crucial triumph in the capital immaterial.
The Diamond, Isco and crown jewel Ronaldo
What has been most surprising about Madrid's form both domestically
and in Europe is that they have been able to maintain it despite missing
their other talisman, Wales international Gareth Bale, for much of the
campaign.
But they have adapted to his absence brilliantly, with a switch to a
4-4-2 diamond enabling them to suffocate
teams in midfield. In that
system Modric and Kroos tuck in ahead of Casemiro, relying on the
full-backs to provide the width.
Further forward Isco has flourished as a roaming attacking midfielder
with 10 goals and eight assists in the league, while Ronaldo's
transition to central striker has been a seamless one.
The Portugal superstar has 25 league goals to his name – with five of
those coming in a run of tricky fixtures against Valencia, Sevilla and
Celta Vigo that Madrid all won to move within a point of the title.
64 straight games with a goal
It's a particularly vacuous cliche, but it is one that rings true. If you don't score goals, you don't win games.
Not scoring has not been a problem for Madrid and, with or without Bale, they continue to prove extremely difficult to stop.
Madrid finished the season having found the net in 64 consecutive games in all competitions.
Barca are similarly prolific, but the two games in which they failed
to score in the league – both against Malaga – resulted in four dropped
points that would have seen the Blaugrana retain the title.
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