PORTUGAL IN THE SEMI-FINAL OF EURO 2016
Cristiano
Ronaldo’s Portugal battled their way to a place in the European Championship
last four on Thursday winning a penalty shootout 5-3 against Poland in a tense
quarter-final.
Robert
Lewandowski scored his first goal of Euro 2016 inside two minutes in the
Marseille clash before his new Bayern Munich teammate, teenager Renato Sanches,
equalised with a powerfully driven shot. The game then went through extra-time
deadlocked at 1-1.
Goalkeeper
Rui Patricio and Ricardo Quaresma were Portugal’s heroes in the shootout.
Ronaldo was
among the players fist-pumping when Patricio dived to his left to save Jakub
Blaszczykowski’s tame fourth shot for the Poles, who had reached the
quarter-finals for the first time.
Quaresma was
next up for Portugal and made no mistake firing high into the net to beat
Poland goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski.
“It hurts and
it will hurt for a long time,” Lewandowski said as Ronaldo celebrated his new
step toward winning a first major international trophy with Portugal.
Poland made a
blistering start to the game. After barely 100 seconds, Kamil Grosicki hurried
past Southampton right back Cedric Soares to deliver a great cross that
Lewandowski drove past a flailing Rui Patricio at his near post.
The Polish
striker’s first goal of the competition, after hitting a record 13 in
qualifying, stunned Portugal.
The early
goal gave Poland momentum, and a defiant but borderline interception by
Grzegorz Krychowiak on Sanches set Arkadiusz Milik up for a 25-yard drive that
sailed wide on the quarter hour.
Ronaldo hit
the defensive wall with one free kick and goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski had no
trouble with Ronaldo’s 18-yard drive from a Nani cross. German referee Felix
Brych waved away Ronaldo’s claims for a penalty on 31 minutes despite replays
suggesting the Real Madrid star was bundled over by centre-back Michal Pazdan
as he went to meet a cross.
Sanches made
amends for Portugal less than two minutes later with a stunning leveller on his
first start at Euro 2016.
The
18-year-old midfielder collected Nani’s cutback from the right side of the area
and hit a fierce shot that deflected off Grzegorz Krychowiak and beat Fabianski
at his near post.
Sanches’ new
employers Bayern Munich, whom he joined on a five-year deal worth 35m euros
last month, will be pleased having seen two players score on the night.
Poland’s
slick passing game, however, was impressive throughout.
Kamil Glik’s
long ball found Grosicki in space to fire in a great cross at the back post
that forced Patricio into action as Lewandowski hovered.
And it took a
timely intervention from Jose Fonte just after the restart to stop Lukasz
Piszcek’s cutback reaching Lewandowski, who got his head to a cross moments
later that Patricio gratfeully collected.
Portugal were
not finished, but Ronaldo’s normally deadly finishing was amiss.
He skewed a
great chance into the side-netting from Nani’s superb ball in behind the
defence.
On the hour,
Ronaldo completely miskicked a shot after an exchange between Joao Mario and
Nani, the ball falling for Adrien Silva to drive the ball off Krychowiak.
Cedric’s
30-yard drive had Fabianski diving dramatically to his right as the ball sailed
a foot past his far post.
Poland
created two chances in two minutes, Patricio notably forced down low to thwart
Milik’s mid-air effort after a cross from Artur Jedrzejczyk.
But they
breathed a sigh of relied when Jedrzejczyk’s interception on Mario’s through
ball for Ronaldo crept past the far post with Fabianski rooted to the spot.
Portugal
should have hit the winners on 85 minutes, but after sneaking behind Pazan to
meet a ball over the top from late substitute Joao Moutinho, Ronaldo’s left
foot failed to connect with what looked like a simple chance.
Extra time
was notable more for the pitch invader who tried to reach Ronaldo than for real
scoring chances. Fourteen security personnel carried the Ronaldo fans off after
he was caught.
PORTUGAL IN THE SEMI-FINAL OF EURO 2016
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, June 30, 2016
Rating:

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