The Free Press Journal

Jan Vertonghen confirms Tottenham exit

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

It's no exaggerati­on to say that Cristiano Ronaldo had more of an impact on Juventus' record-extending ninth straight Serie A title than anyone else.

The five-time Ballon d'Or winner matched a record by scoring in 11 straight league matches before the break for the coronaviru­s pandemic and quickly regained his form during the restart by reaching the 30goal mark after only 30 games in his second season in Italy.

For his 31st goal, Ronaldo scored the opener when Juventus beat Sampdoria 2-0 on Sunday to seal the title with two games to spare.

Ronaldo needs only one more goal to break a tie for the Juventus single-season record for league goals set by Felice Borel in 1933-34.

Ronaldo's 10 goals after the lockdown are more than any other player has scored in Europe's top five leagues, with Manchester City's Raheem Sterling and Bayern Munich's Robert Lewandowsk­i each scoring nine.

"Records are always important, but the important thing is that the team wins," Ronaldo said.

"These things are nice, but the scoring title is a natural process that comes as a consequenc­e of scoring to win games for the team."

At 35, Ronaldo has started every match since the restart.

"He has this incredible ability to recover," Juventus coach Maurizio Sarri said.

"I think it's just in his DNA, his ability to project himself on to the next goal, every time. His mental and physical recovery rate is definitely unique."

Ronaldo has developed an effective partnershi­p with Paulo Dybala during the restart.

"We might have some moments in a game where we don't cover the penalty area to perfection, but everything is compensate­d by their individual strength," Sarri said.

"We're talking about two players who combined to score 41 goals this season. That's a world-class level."

Until recently, the most consecutiv­e titles won in Serie A had been five, first set by Juventus from 193135.

The five-season streak was then matched by Torino from 1943-49, including a period interrupte­d by World War II; and Inter Milan from 2006-10.

Juventus already has the longest streak in Europe's top five leagues. Although Bayern Munich, which recently won the Bundesliga for the eighth straight time, isn't far behind.

The longest top-flight streak anywhere in Europe was 14 set by Latvian club Skonto from 1991-2004 and Lincoln of Gibraltar from 2003-16.

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