Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Bravo! Chile shoot out

- Associated Press sportm@hindustant­imes.com

CLASS ACT

biggest asset at the Confederat­ions Cup isn’t the dazzling attacking skill of Alexis Sanchez or even Arturo Vidal’s creativity.

It’s down-to-earth goalkeeper Claudio Bravo, who saves Chile when its hyper-aggressive pressing is no use at all — at the penalty spot.

Recently recovered from injury, ridiculed by some fans in England following an erratic season at Manchester City, the 34-year-old was imperious in Wednesday’s 3-0 penalty shootout win over Portugal, stopping every shot he faced. He also made a key stop early in the game, which finished 0-0 after extra time.

Bravo isn’t charismati­c — he talked calmly of feeling “very balanced” after making the three saves that sent Chile to the Confederat­ions Cup final. But he is the perfect symbol for a Chilean team which, despite its reputation for a swashbuckl­ing attacking style, is happy to grind out wins when the pressure’s on.

For three years in a row now, Chile have specialise­d in gritty wins over football’s superstars. This time, it was Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal, but in 2015 and 2016 it was Lionel Messi and Argentina who fell to Chile on penalties in consecutiv­e Copa finals, both after goalless draws.

“We were playing with our head as well as our heart,” Bravo said, and coach Juan Antonio Pizzi elaborated on the meticulous video research while allowed Bravo to predict where Portugal’s penalties would go.

“You never know exactly what is going to happen, but you can prepare,” Pizzi said. “Our goalkeeper could foresee what was going to happen and what the player was going to do.”

Chile can win in style as a 7-0 demolition of Mexico last year showed, but its heavy emphasis on constant high pressing can produce a stalemate. The Chileans tired themselves out against Portugal — easy to do when it’s your fourth game in 12 days — but the constant pressure also forced Portugal to tire, slowing the pace of much of the second half and extra time.

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