The Hamilton Spectator

Ronaldo scores again, Morocco out

- GRAHAM DUNBAR

MOSCOW — Off the top of his head, Cristiano Ronaldo scored yet another goal, set a European record and eliminated Morocco from the World Cup.

The Portugal forward headed in a fourth-minute cross from the right to give Portugal a 1-0 victory on Wednesday. It was his 85th goal for his country, the most for any European player in almost 150 years of internatio­nal soccer.

“It was beautiful for me,” Ronaldo said after being voted the man of the match for the second straight game.

Ronaldo celebrated his goal by pointing at his chest during a trademark run and soaring leap toward the corner flag at the Luzhniki Stadium.

The goal moved the 33-year-old Ronaldo ahead of Ferenc Puskas, another Real Madrid great who scored his last goal for Hungary in 1956. He is alone in second place worldwide behind Ali Daei’s 109 goals for Iran.

“He has a great coach,” Portugal coach Fernando Santos said through a translator, laughing when asked about Ronaldo. “He’s like a port wine. He knows how to refine his capacity and age at his best.”

Ronaldo’s four goals top the individual scoring chart at this year’s World Cup. Buoyed by his hat trick in a 3-3 draw against Spain on Friday, including a spectacula­r free kick late in the game, Ronaldo scored against Morocco with his first meaningful touch of the match.

He was too strong for marker Manuel Da Costa and found space in the goalmouth to meet Joao Moutinho’s cross following a short corner.

Ronaldo had two more free kick chances, each from less than 20 yards. But both were blocked by a solid wall of defenders as the Portuguese ground out a result from an often poor display.

There were 42 fouls in the match, and only two Portuguese shots on target.

Most of the best play came from Morocco, but the North Africans now have no chance of advancing from the group stage after a second straight 1-0 loss.

Morocco had enough scoring chances, nearly all from set pieces, and three came in a five-minute spell early in the second half.

“Those who know how to be in the penalty box and know how to make plays are the ones who make all the difference,” Morocco coach Herve Renard said.

Benatia, a rugged defender

who plays for Juventus, led the effort to stop Ronaldo. His hard tackles from behind, however, earned him a yellow card.

There was a separate clash in the penalty area between Morocco winger Noureddine Amrabat and Portugal left back Raphael Guerreiro.

Guerreiro raised his shirt to show the referee a set of scratches across the right side of his stomach, and Renard was lectured by American referee Mark Geiger for demanding a video

review of the incident. Amrabat started the match wearing protective headgear only five days after sustaining a head injury in the match against Iran. He discarded the cushioned protector early in Wednesday’s match, and played strongly for the rest of the game.

The World Cup does not have formal concussion protocol, and his return seemed to contradict a previous Morocco team statement that he would rest for a full week.

 ?? MICHAEL STEELE GETTY IMAGES ?? Cristiano Ronaldo scores the only goal of the match past Monir El Kajoui on Wednesday, stopping Morocco from advancing in the World Cup.
MICHAEL STEELE GETTY IMAGES Cristiano Ronaldo scores the only goal of the match past Monir El Kajoui on Wednesday, stopping Morocco from advancing in the World Cup.

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