China Daily

It’s guile versus grit as Ronaldo and Godin renew Madrid rivalry

Real and Atletico stalwarts set for mouthwater­ing last-16 showdown

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SOCHI, Russia — The man who has marshalled the best defense in the World Cup so far will relish the task of trying to stop his old foe Cristiano Ronaldo when Uruguay and Portugal meet in Sochi on Saturday.

The Madrid derby comes to the shores of the Black Sea in the last 16 with Uruguayan captain Diego Godin, of Atletico, and his club teammate Jose Maria Gimenez coming up against Real and Portugal’s five-time Ballon d’Or winner.

It will be a fascinatin­g battle at Fisht Stadium with Ronaldo, at 33, enjoying his best World Cup but Uruguay the only side to come through the group stage in Russia without conceding a goal.

Godin is an expert at keeping clean sheets, as the leader of an Atletico defense that is the most formidable in the European club game — it kept 34 in all competitio­ns last season — and of a Uruguay side that has not conceded a goal in 2018 in six games.

Ronaldo, though, has already scored four times at this World Cup, including a hat-trick on his last visit here when Portugal drew 3-3 with Spain. That means he has 85 internatio­nal goals, more than any other male European player in history.

In the last two years, he has scored two hat-tricks for Real against Godin’s Atletico, having also emerged victorious in two Madrid derby Champions League finals.

More in their locker

But the rugged and brave Godin, who needed reconstruc­tive dental surgery after having three teeth punched out in an aerial challenge with Valencia goalkeeper Neto earlier this year, has succeeded in muzzling Ronaldo on plenty of other occasions at club level going back almost a decade.

“God is a star. He defends, commands, scores goals, wins titles, and does not miss a game,” said Diego Maradona recently.

On Saturday, Gimenez — who scored Uruguay’s late winner against Egypt — is set to rejoin Godin in central defense after missing the 3-0 victory over Russia due to injury.

Ronaldo, meanwhile, will look to get back among the goals having had a penalty saved in Portugal’s 1-1 draw with Iran. That, and the VAR-awarded late spot-kick for the Iranians, condemned the defending European champion to this tie rather than a meeting with the host in Moscow.

Portugal surely would have preferred that, for while Uruguay continues to produce tough centerback­s, it is by no means completely reliant on them.

This is a side with excellent, Italy-based midfielder­s in Rodrigo Bentancur, Lucas Torreira, who is being linked with Arsenal, and Matias Vecino. And up front it boasts two of the greatest goalscorer­s of their generation in Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani.

Suarez might lack the same sharpness of old, but he has still scored twice in Russia. One more and he will equal 1950 World Cup-winner Oscar Miguez’s Uruguayan record of eight goals at the tournament.

Overachiev­ers

“They are a typical South American side,” said Portugal coach Fernando Santos.

“It’s not just in this World Cup that they have not been conceding goals. It has been like that for the whole of 2018. Oscar Tabarez is the longestser­ving internatio­nal manager. That means he has a very strong relationsh­ip with his players.”

These two countries with a combined population of 13.5 million have long been overachiev­ers on the internatio­nal scene — the last decade under Tabarez has seen two-time former winner Uruguay reach one World Cup semifinal and win one Copa America, while Portugal triumphed at Euro 2016.

And the Uruguayans hold their opponents in equally high regard, conscious that Ronaldo is supported by younger talents like Bernardo Silva and Goncalo Guedes.

“We will mark him with the same respect we mark everyone, despite him being a superstar,” said Uruguay defender Sebastian Coates of Ronaldo. “You don’t prepare a match looking at one player.”

 ?? AFP ?? Portugal superstar Cristiano Ronaldo (left) is well acquainted with Uruguay defender Diego Godin from their Madrid derby encounters in La Liga. The pair will renew their rivalry in an eagerly anticipate­d World Cup last-16 clash in Sochi on Saturday.
AFP Portugal superstar Cristiano Ronaldo (left) is well acquainted with Uruguay defender Diego Godin from their Madrid derby encounters in La Liga. The pair will renew their rivalry in an eagerly anticipate­d World Cup last-16 clash in Sochi on Saturday.
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