National Post

RONALDO HAS THE MAGIC TOUCH.

PORTUGUESE STAR TOP REASON HIS TEAM KEEPS FINDING WAYS TO WIN

- KurtiS lArSon in Saint Petersburg klarson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/kurtlarsun

Portugal wasn’t just fortunate in Wednesday’s narrow win over Morocco. The Iberians have been living on borrowed time for years, beginning with their improbable run at the UEFA Euro.

Better put, they’ve been riding Cristiano Ronaldo’s incessant goal-scoring form en route to continued success at major tournament­s.

This is the same Portuguese side that managed just one regulation time win before stealing the European Championsh­ip in 2016.

Even Portuguese coach Fernando Santos knows they’ve gone through eight of their nine lives.

“For Morocco, it’s maybe an unfair result,” Santos bluntly stated in the aftermath of Portugal’s 1-0 win. “That’s football. If you score, you win.”

At least Portugal’s chainsmoki­ng bench boss was honest.

He had to be after watching his side defend endlessly in a match that was more one-sided than anyone expected.

“I’m not happy with the performanc­e of my team,” Santos added.

Excluding Ronaldo, of course, who showed up at Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium Wednesday sporting a newly-sprouted goatee with an emphasis on the “GOAT.”

The typically clean-shaven goal-scoring machine undoubtedl­y wanted to send a message via his new facial hair: I’m the “Greatest Of All-Time.”

It didn’t matter that Ronaldo did absolutely nothing in this match but score.

His headed goal minutes into Wednesday’s Group B fixture validated his repeated gags.

He stroked his hairless chin last week amid punishing Spain with a hat-trick.

“He has a great coach,” Santos joked post-game, later suggesting that “Portugal continues to follow its normal path” at major tournament­s.

Santos, the realist, knows what he’s talking about. Even he’s wondering when a banana peel is finally going to appear; When and if Ronaldo isn’t going to finish his only opportunit­y.

“It is a lot easier to play with a player who has a goal opportunit­y and scores,” Moroccan coach Herve Renard lamented.

It was the politicall­y correct way of saying “we did everything but score.”

It’s too bad nobody will remember this Moroccan side when the tournament is done.

We’re quick to forget good sides that aren’t from UEFA.

Few recall Algeria’s heroic run four years ago.

No, they’ll look back and see Ronaldo’s name on the scoresheet.

“The most gifted players are the ones who make all the difference,” Renard said in stating the obvious.

But this tournament is about more than who’s gifted. It has descended into a side show to bestow the “greatest” tag — or to at least tilt it in Ronaldo’s favour.

You’d be naive to think Ronaldo isn’t viewing this World Cup as an opportunit­y to move ahead of Lionel Messi after the Argentine attacker struggled and squandered a penalty kick against Iceland.

He almost certainly views next Monday’s meeting with Iran as an opportunit­y to seal the Golden Boot before the knockout phase begins.

“He’s like an (aged) wine,” Santos described the 33-year-old Ronaldo. “He knows how to age at his best — his technical prowess, his strategy. He’s constantly evolving. He knows himself and what he can do.”

Yet here he is, at another major tournament, still doing things that stun viewers into reconsider­ing whether Messi really is on his level — or where this Portugal team would be without him.

“He has a team with him,” Santos added amid receiving a barrage of questions concerning his captain. “Nobody plays alone.”

With Ronaldo, though, you get the sense he could do what he’s doing now with any number of teams at this World Cup.

His goals here haven’t been team goals. They’ve been individual efforts or free kicks or, like Wednesday, due to having more desire to get on the end of a corner kick.

“In some aspects this game has some things similar with Spain,” Santos suggested.

For the second straight match, Portugal was second best in every single statistica­l category.

It simply doesn’t matter when Ronaldo is raising the bar in pursuit of the designatio­n he craves, maybe even more than winning this tournament.

 ??  ??
 ?? FRANCISCO SECO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo is staking his claim to soccer’s greatest player of all time, Postmedia’s Kurtis Larson writes.
FRANCISCO SECO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo is staking his claim to soccer’s greatest player of all time, Postmedia’s Kurtis Larson writes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada