Portugal 2-0 Wales: Cristiano Ronaldo and Nani net twice in three minutes to crush Welsh hopes as Euro 2016 journey ends in Lyon
- Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale both had chances to find the back of the net in a goalless first half in Lyon
- But it was the Portuguese who broke the deadlock with a towering header in the 50th minute
- Nani then doubled the lead three minutes later, diverting an effort from Ronaldo past Wayne Hennessey
When
 his team-mates had released him, when the private party of 
congratulation by the corner flag had ended, Cristiano Ronaldo 
remembered his trademark celebration. Maybe there is a little bit of 
branding around it now, there is certainly no small ego — but at its 
heart beats a splendid and pure excess of joy.
So
 he did what he always does. He jumped in the air, spun around, flexed 
every muscle in what is an obsessively toned body, and stood, fists 
clenched by his sides.
Usually
 in this moment he says, ‘Si’. Here he seemed to emit more of a wordless
 roar. Maybe a positive exclamation was in there somewhere. Either way, 
like the goal that put Portugal on their way to the final in Paris on 
Sunday, it was unmistakably Ronaldo.

Cristiano Ronaldo (left) rose highest to send a header crashing into the top corner, beyond Wales goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey

The goal in the 50th minute from the Portugal No 7 broke down what had been a stubborn Wales defence

Gareth Bale could only watch on as Ronaldo's header arrowed into the top corner to put Portugal into the lead against Wales

Bale watches on as Ronaldo wheels away in celebration at breaking the deadlock and putting Portugal into the lead

Real Madrid man Ronaldo celebrates putting Portugal into the lead early in the second half of the game against Wales
Impossible
 to begrudge, too. For all that cynics carp about his carefully crafted 
image, his apparent selfishness, the way every event turns into a 
festival of him, him, him, there is also something to be enjoyed in a 
great player who takes such pleasure in the simple act of scoring a 
goal.
There
 are so many scowls now, so much posturing, cynical badge kissing, 
inexplicable anger and moodiness, that to watch Ronaldo and the 
happiness the moment brings, remains among football’s rays of sunshine.
He
 knew what the goal meant, not just personally, but to his country. 
Within three minutes, Portugal had scored again — Ronaldo’s shot setting
 it up this time, Nani on target — and the match was won.
Dragons
 are mythical creatures, and Wales’s run to the semi-final here has 
sometimes seemed unreal, but this was one mighty effort too many. With 
key players suspended, it was always going to be difficult to overcome 
even an ordinary Portuguese side, and so it proved.
Wales sorely missed Aaron Ramsey’s influence in midfield and barely threatened as a result. 
Their
 progress has been magnificent, but within this egalitarian group there 
is a core of players that manager Chris Coleman could never do without 
in a match of this nature, Ramsey among them.
They were never as dangerous as against Belgium and goalkeeper Rui Patricio was scarcely troubled.
The
 last time a major international tournament used a format of 24 teams 
reduced to 16 for the group stage, a lucky loser — third-placed Italy — 
ended up in the final, and so it is here.
Italy scraped out of their group at the 1994 World Cup and Portugal finished third behind Hungary and Iceland.
Fernando
 Santos’s team had not won a single game inside 90 minutes until this 
game, but here they are. So Ronaldo must have something.
This
 is not a great Portugal team, but it is propelled by the desire of a 
great player. He was voted man of the match, and rightly so.
It
 wasn’t just his part in the goals that made him stand out — or even the
 free-kick that came as close as he has ever been to scoring with a dead
 ball in an international tournament — but more the way he served his 
team. 

Nani (right) doubled Portugal's lead only three minutes later, diverting an attempt from Ronaldo beyond goalkeeper Hennessey 

Nani's touch on the ball took it in the opposite direction to where Hennessey was diving and suddenly, Portugal led by two

The Portugal squad celebrate Nani's goal in the centre of the pitch while the Wales players appear stunned at falling two behind

Ronaldo went close to adding a third with a free-kick from range, but his effort whistled over the crossbar for Portugal

Bale tried to haul Wales back into the game but was unable to do so as Portugal advanced into the Euro 2016 final

After the final whistle, Ronaldo commiserated club team-mate Bale before joining the rest of the Portugal team to celebrate 
He
 put in a shift, he truly did. Up and down the flank when necessary, 
central for much of the game, always alert to opportunity, always the 
man most likely to decide the occasion.
This
 was equally billed as Ronaldo versus Gareth Bale, the battle of the 
Galacticos. There was only one winner there, too. Bale was reduced by 
Ramsey’s absence. He had lost his fellow creative, the man who helps 
make his space.
So
 this was Ronaldo’s night and what a header it was to open the scoring. 
Ronaldo outjumped James Chester but no fault can be attached to the 
centre half. He was simply beaten by the better man, a short corner 
whipped in, the angle changed to best suit its target, Ronaldo, eyes on 
the ball, leap, hang — and in like a rocket.
Just three minutes later, that lead had doubled and one sensed there would be no way back for Wales.
It
 was Ronaldo’s shot this time, evaded by Renato Sanches, who may have 
been marginally offside and was most certainly active, finding Nani who 
poked it past Wayne Hennessey from close range.
Hennessey
 spilled another shot from Nani soon after, which Joao Mario should have
 scored on the rebound, but it would have been harsh for Wales to go 
down too heavily. 

The Wales squad made sure to thank their travelling support after the final whistle confirmed their exit from Euro 2016

The Wales supporters in Lyon stayed behind after full-time to show their appreciation to their players for the efforts

Ronaldo, meanwhile, was leading the Portugal celebrations after his side sealed a spot in Sunday's final in Paris
This
 has been far from a vintage tournament, but not for Wales, who have 
excelled. They can leave with heads high, beaten by a player who, even 
at 32, can still lay claim to being the best in the world. It was a huge
 night for British sport and the good news for those who hung on through
 the fourth and fifth sets of the Andy Murray tennis match before 
turning over to the football was that they didn’t miss all that much in 
the first half. 
It wasn’t bad, but it was hardly Wales’s quarter-final with Belgium, which crackled with tension from the start. 
For
 all the hyperbole around the match-up of Ronaldo and Bale, the pair 
sought influence without real success in the first 45 minutes. 
The
 best Bale could do was force a corner or two with his crosses, the best
 for Ronaldo was a 44th-minute header that at no time looked to be going
 in.
He
 was surprisingly well marshalled by James Collins, replacing the 
suspended Ben Davies at the back, even if some of the West Ham man’s 
moves were dangerously close to attracting the attention of Swedish 
referee Jonas Eriksson. 

Wales manager Chris Coleman made three swift substitutions after his side fell behind in a bid to cajole a reaction

Hal Robson-Kanu vies for the ball against Southampton and Portugal central defender Jose Fonte during the semi-final

Bale's delivery into the penalty area is blocked by Portugal defender Fonte in a first half that generally lacked action

Ronaldo struggled to influence the game as much as usual in the first half, with Wales crowding him out when in possession

Bale had an opening to shoot at goal from a smartly worked Wales corner but was unable to get his attempt on target
Certainly
 Ronaldo was screaming for a penalty when Collins placed him in what 
appeared to be a headlock in the area early on. It could easily have 
been given but Eriksson and his assistants were not that brave. 
Joe
 Allen did go into the book, though, for two fouls inside eight minutes,
 and was lucky not to see red for another clattering challenge.
The
 amnesty that UEFA grants at the semi-final stage — only a player sent 
off can be banned from the final — makes foul play almost the sensible 
tactic if threatened, and the players take full advantage. It makes for 
disjointed matches, at times, like this one.
Ronaldo,
 too, was booked late on for dissent, but even with the minutes ticking 
down, he remained on the pitch. Portugal rested him against Albania in a
 qualifying game once, lost, and the manager got sacked. No chances were
 being taken, and none were sought.
Ronaldo
 would have had to be dragged off by his expensively coiffured hair and,
 at the final whistle, his smile said it all. Joy, unbridled. Was this 
his proudest moment for Portugal? There is no doubt. Si. 

Ronaldo was sent tumbling over in the opening exchanges by Ashley Williams but no free-kick was given by the referee

But moments later, midfielder Joe 
Allen recieved a yellow card in the eighth minute after two fouls in the
 early moments of the match

Real Madrid team-mates Ronaldo (left) and Bale shake hands before the beginning of the Euro 2016 semi-final in Lyon 

As has been the case throughout Euro 2016, the Wales supporters were out in full force for the match against Portugal

The match made tense and nervous viewing for suspended Welsh duo Ben Davies (left) and Aaron Ramsey

Portugal and Real  defender Pepe missed out on the Euro 2016 semi-final encounter against Wales due to an injury
HahahshshshshahshshshsshshshshshshshzhhzhHzhzhzhzhzhzhzhzh
 whales!!!!!!!! You think your so great and laugh at bus English because
 we lost to Iceland but Iceland bet portrigal and you couldn't even beat
 them? Hahahaha keep your moth shut and well see you in the Quatar Euros
Bale
 had a poor game. Misplaced crosses, passes and shots. I don't care 
about red arrows from bandwagoners, who quickly forget about their Welsh
 gran or uncle who used to live in Wales, after Wales lose. 
Excellent
 goal for most players but routine stuff for Ronaldo. He'll need to have
 the game of his life for Portugal to win the trophy. Even then it's not
 certain as the Portuguese defense will have to step up and Bruno Alves 
just doesn't cut it.
On
 hindsight...portugal don't deserve reach the final. The welsh team had 
progresses well by reaching the semi...much better than english team. 
Again bale is a over-rated player. Bale performance looks good bcos of 
his other welsh team members playing as a team.
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