Business Day

Bale, Hazard out to make history

- AGENCY STAFF Lille

HISTORY awaits the victors as Wales talisman Gareth Bale and Belgium star Eden Hazard lead their respective golden generation­s into battle in Friday’s Euro 2016 quarterfin­al.

HISTORY awaits the victors as Wales talisman Gareth Bale and rejuvenate­d Belgium star Eden Hazard lead their respective golden generation­s into battle in Friday’s Euro 2016 quarterfin­al.

Belgium, second in the Fifa rankings, are desperate to make good on their squad’s vast potential and reach a first major semifinal since the 1986 World Cup. Wales are riding high in their first major tournament in 58 years and, having outlasted British rivals England and Northern Ireland, confidence is up.

“I think it is fair to say it could be the biggest ever game for Wales,” said Bale, the tournament’s joint-top scorer with three goals.

“We know about the quarterfin­al in 1958 (at the World Cup), but since then it’s definitely the biggest game in Welsh football. It is one we’re looking forward to. We just want to enjoy the occasion, take it all in and hopefully we can get into the semis.”

After hitting the heights in a 3-0 win over Russia in their final group B game, Chris Coleman’s Wales had to dig deep to see off Northern Ireland in the last 16. An attritiona­l match was settled in the 75th minute when Bale’s cross was turned in by Gareth McAuley for an own goal, but Friday’s game in Lille could be a more open encounter.

Beaten 2-0 by Italy in their first match, Marc Wilmots’s Belgium have since grown in stature, beating the Republic of Ireland and Sweden before crushing Hungary 4-0.

The victory over Hungary was built around a man-of-the-match display from Hazard, who scored one goal and made another in one of his finest internatio­nal performanc­es.

After a bleak season with Chelsea in the English Premier League, the 25year-old embodies Belgium’s hopes of improving on their quarterfin­al showing at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Hazard sustained a minor thigh problem against Hungary that kept him out of training for two days, but is expected to start against Wales.

Like Hazard, Bale is the symbol of his team’s rise. He has already enjoyed success against Belgium, scoring the only goal of the teams’ qualifying encounter in Cardiff a year ago.

It was a result that confirmed Wales’s arrival as a force, but Belgium defender Toby Alderweire­ld is confident his side will not meet the same fate again.

“We have the players to stop Bale,” the Tottenham Hotspur centre-back said. “We can’t have silly concentrat­ion lapses when we have the ball. Since the start, our objective has been to win the tournament. But it’s important to go into each match in the right way.”

Alderweire­ld will play in a reconfigur­ed defence at Stade Pierre-Mauroy, with 21-year-old Manchester City centreback Jason Denayer set to replace the suspended Thomas Vermaelen.

Atletico Madrid winger Yannick Ferreira Carrasco could also come into the team in place of Dries Mertens after a goal-scoring cameo against Hungary.

Wales captain Ashley Williams was seen with his arm in a sling after the win over Northern Ireland, following a collision with teammate Jonathan Williams, but the Swansea City centre-back took a full part in training on Wednesday.

As Belgium are likely to adopt a higher line than Northern Ireland, Hal Robson-Kanu could return up front for Wales in place of the less mobile Sam Vokes. Belgium’s star-studded lineup makes them favourites, but Coleman believes the expectatio­n that has clung to their players in recent years could give his side an advantage.

 ?? Pictures: REUTERS ?? MAIN ATTRACTION­S: Belgium’s Eden Hazard, left, and Gareth Bale of Wales are the form players going into Friday’s Euro quarterfin­al in Lille.
Pictures: REUTERS MAIN ATTRACTION­S: Belgium’s Eden Hazard, left, and Gareth Bale of Wales are the form players going into Friday’s Euro quarterfin­al in Lille.

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