The Sun (Malaysia)

We learnt as Ramos heads Real through

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Ramos can always be relied to score the goals that matter

Make no mistake about it, Real Madrid were in serious trouble heading out for the second-half of this match. Although they led on aggregate, Napoli had dominated the match, led 1-0 on the night and looked the team more likely to score again.

Step forward Sergio Ramos. The Madrid captain always seems to score the goals that matter – such as the late equaliser against Barcelona in El Clasico earlier this season, or his 90th minute header in the Champions League Final against Atletico Madrid 2014 – and was on hand to bail out Real’s faltering frontline once again.

Chelsea would be lucky to have Kalidou Koulibaly

It takes a special kind of defender to keep Cristiano Ronaldo quiet. And that’s exactly what Koulibaly is. He repeatedly frustrated Ronaldo, dealt with the aerial threat posed by Benzema and was always tidy in possession.

Athletic, discipline­d and powerful, Koulibaly would be a superb signing for the Premier League leaders. Although playing as well as he is, Napoli will surely demand a huge fee for his services.

Pepe ,34, who is departing the Santiago Bernabeu after 10 hugely successful seasons at the end of the current campaign, was handed a difficult night at the office by Napoli’s razor-sharp frontline of Jose Callejon, Dries Mertens and Lorenzo Insigne.

Their collective pace troubled both Pepe and Sergio Ramos, but the Portuguese centreback still impressed with his physcialit­y and wiliness, winning one thunderous first-half tackle to deny Mertens and generally using every trick in the book to deny the trio any goalscorin­g opportunit­ies – including theatrical­ly throwing himself to the floor on at least one occasion.

He is nowhere near as quick as he used to be and his career at Madrid has reached its natural end, but the European cham- pions will certainly struggle to replace him.

Mertens has been truly revitalise­d by Sarri

Napoli’s coach Maurizio Sarri has revolution­ised the career of Belgian forward Dries Mertens. The 29-year-old was initially deployed as a left-winger at Napoli – and a back-up one at that – but has been moved into a central role by Sarri where he has flourished. He is well in contention to win the Serie A’s Capocannon­iere top goal-scorer award, just one goal behind Gonzalo Higuain, and was Napoli’s best player against Real.

He opened the scoring with a fine low shot past Keylor Navas after being played in by Marek Hamsik and repeatedly exploited the space between Real’s midfield and defence, drifting between the lines with confidence.

For a player fast approachin­g 30, his transforma­tion is nothing short of remarkable and he was both unlucky to be denied two second-half penalties, and to find himself on the losing team.

Napoli supporters taking nothing for granted

What a contrast the Stadio San Paolo made from the Emirates Stadium in the hours ahead of kickoff. While Arsenal fans largely eschewed supporting their team in favour of protesting against Arsene Wenger, Napoli supporters arrived at their stadium up to five hours early to begin generating an intimidati­ng atmosphere as their team prepared to overturn a 3-1 deficit.

Some die-hard supporters even began camping outside Madrid’s team hotel on Monday, singing in an attempt to keep the team awake throughout the night.

The result didn’t go according to plan, but Napoli’s supporters were in fine voice throughout, roaring their team on until the very final whistle. They might be out of the Champions League after a heavy aggregate defeat and with Juventus out of sight in Serie A, but their fans remain completely committed to the cause. Portions of Arsenal’s fan-base would do well to take note. – The Independen­t

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