Ronaldo ends Germany curse to send Portugal into Nations League final
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates victory after the UEFA Nations League semi final soccer match between Germany and Portugal at Allianz Arena. Sven Hoppe/dpa
Cristiano Ronaldo scored the winner after Francisco Conceicao emulated his father as Portugal ended their long curse against hosts Germany with a 2-1 comeback victory on Wednesday for a place in the Nations League final.
Man of the Match Conceicao with a superb curling shot in the 63rd and Ronaldo's tap-in five minutes later reversed Germany's 48th minute lead from a header by Liverpool target Florian Wirtz.
Advertisement
It was the 137th national team goal for the 40-year-old Ronaldo in his 220th cap, both figures being world records.
Portuguse delight
Portugal previously last beat Germany 25 years ago at Euro 2000 - 3-0 from a hat-trick by Conceicao's father, Sergio Conceicao. They then lost five times in a row against them, with Ronaldo featuring in all of them.
Winners of the inaugural Nations League in 2019, Portugal advanced into Sunday's final in the same Munich arena which will be a contest for a second title because they will face either 2021 winners France or 2023 champions Spain.
"Conceding wasn't easy but we showed a lot of character," midfielder Bernardo Silva told streaming portal DAZN, adding "hopefully to win" the final but warning that "France and Spain have a lot of quality."
Advertisement
Looking at Ronaldo, he praised "his ambition to keep going. We are happy to have him with us."
Coach Roberto Martinez hailed his team's "tactical flexibility" as he said: "I never felt Germany had control. It is one of the games where you feel really proud as a coach."
German revival stalls
Germany, who lacked in many aspects, will play for third place in Stuttgart on Sunday as their dream of a first title since the 2017 Confederations Cup ended with a first defeat since the Euro 2024 quarter-finals against eventual champions Spain.
"We were not good enough over 90 minutes to win this game. We didn't have enough courage and weren't clean enough. A lot more would have been possible," said captain Joshua Kimmich, who earned his 100th cap.
Advertisement
"We have to learn our lessons and try to win on Sunday," Kimmich said.
Coach Julian Nagelsmann said: "We weren't as ruthless as in previous games. We were not active after scoring, lost many balls."
TerStegen returns, Vitinha starts on subs' bench
Marc-Andre ter Stegen returned between the Germany posts from a severe knee injury and in-form VfB Stuttgart forward Nick Woltemade started after being called up for the first time from a depleted squad missing the likes of Jamal Musiala, Kai Havertz and Antonio Rüdiger.
Portugal midfielder Vitinha was benched five days after his heroics in the same stadium in Paris Saint-Germain's 5-0 Champions League final triumph over Inter Milan, while his PSG team-mates Nuno Mendes and Joao Neves started.
Advertisement
Portugal's strong start, Germany try to hit back
The match started a few minutes late because a hailstorm had delayed the warm-up, and although the hosts threatened early from Leon Goretzka it was Portugal who had the brighter start with high pressing.
Ronaldo failed to hit the ball properly after a determined run from Pedro Neto down the left as Ter Stegen easily gathered, and Neto blazed over shortly afterwards.
Germany grew into the game, and now Portugal keeper Diogo Costa needed big saves to deny first Woltemade in the 19th and Goretzka two minutes later.
Portugal almost pounced seconds after the restart when Ronaldo just failed to connect with Mendes' sharp cross from the left at the far post.
Advertisement
Wirtz scores but Portugal hit back
Wirtz had been no major factor but in the 48th got the ball, passed it to Kimmich, ran into the penalty area and headed the captain's chipped ball into the far right corner for 1-0.
Bruno Fernandes curled wide as Portugal sought a response and also brought fresh blood including Vitinha and Conceicao.
Ronaldo headed over and had a free-kick blocked but Portugal were level in the 63rd when Conceicao cut inside from the right and sensationally curled into the far bottom corner.
Germany were rattled and Portugal were ahead five minutes later when Ronaldo had no problems finishing off another low cross from Mendes.
Advertisement
German substitute Karim Adeyemi hit the outside post but Portugal remained the more dangerous side. Ter Stegen saved superbly from Diogo Jota and Conceicao, and again from Jota seconds before the final whistle.
Germany's Joshua Kimmich (C) and his teammates thank the fans after the UEFA Nations League semi final soccer match between Germany and Portugal at Allianz Arena. Sven Hoppe/dpa
Portugal's Christiano Ronaldo reacts during the UEFA Nations League semi final soccer match between Germany and Portugal at Allianz Arena. Federico Gambarini/dpa
Portugal's Francisco Conceicao celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the UEFA Nations League semi final soccer match between Germany and Portugal at Allianz Arena. Federico Gambarini/dpa
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
35 minutes ago
- CNN
Teenage superstar Lamine Yamal stars as Spain beats France in Nations League semifinal goalfest
Before a ball was even kicked on Thursday, the UEFA Nations League semifinal between France and Spain was billed as a clash of two modern greats, and the match certainly didn't disappoint. Inspired by the likes of teenage superstar Lamine Yamal, La Roja managed to get the better of the goalfest, beating Les Bleus 5-4 in an all-time classic. The result means Spain will progress through to the final where it will face Portugal on June 8. The nine-goal thriller, the highest scoring match in the tournament's short history, is perhaps less surprising when you consider the number of world-class forwards on the pitch. France boasted attacking talents such as Kylian Mbappé, as well as Champions League heroes Désiré Doué and Ousmane Dembélé, but it was 17-year-old Spanish star Yamal who once again stole the show. The teenager scored two goals in the match and produced another memorable performance which has perhaps convinced even more people of his Ballon d'Or credentials. 'When two great teams like this play, you sometimes see a lot of goals,' Yamal said after the match. 'They will make you suffer until the end, but we went to the final despite the mistakes we made. We were aware of what we wanted to do. We wanted to make history. The greatest thing when you are winning is to keep winning.' The youngster had a part to play in Spain's opening goal, beating his man on the right wing before crossing into the box. The ball was brilliantly held up by Mikel Oyarzabal before the striker teed up Nico Williams who rifled his finish into the roof of the net in the 22nd minute. Just three minutes later and the Euro 2024 champions had doubled their lead. Oyarzabal once again provided the assist, but this time it was Arsenal man Mikel Merino who produced the finish as Spain took a 2-0 lead going into the break. The second half saw more free-flowing attacking play and Yamal soon got on the scoresheet. The winger was brought down in the box and stepped up to take the subsequent penalty. Despite his age, Yamal looked confident before passing his spotkick into the back of the net in the 53rd minute. Two minutes later and France found itself 4-0 down, after midfielder Pedri produced a wonderfully chipped finish to seemingly put the game to bed. But it was then time for France and Mbappé to take center stage. The Real Madrid striker responded with a penalty of his own in the 59th minute to cut the deficit to 4-1. But the French revival was cut short by Yamal, after the youngster raced onto a through ball to poke Spain 5-1 ahead. Perhaps confident of the victory, Spain seemed to take its foot off the gas which opened the door for a possible comeback from Les Bleus. Debutant Rayan Cherki scored the goal of the game in the 79th minute, with his sweetly struck volley making it 5-2. An own-goal from Spain's Dani Vivian then gave France a glimmer of hope in the closing stages and the comeback was almost complete when Randal Kolo Muani made it 5-4 in added time. But France simply ran out of time and looked frustrated when the referee blew his whistle for full-time. 'We had some bursts of play we haven't had for a long time,' Mbappé said after the game, trying to sum up the frantic 90 minutes. 'But in just 10 minutes of the first half, we conceded two goals – and the same thing happened in the second half.' Spain's win now sets up a brilliant all-Iberian final against Portugal, which will see 17-year-old Yamal come up against 40-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo in a battle of two generational greats.
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
How Schalke can benefit from Bayer Leverkusen's pursuit of Malick Thiaw
With Jonathan Tah swapping Bayer Leverkusen for Bayern Munich, Simon Rolfes is working on defensive solutions with die Werkself eyeing Milan's Malick Thiaw. Bayer were priced out of a move for the German last summer, but Milan are now open to offers. Kim Falkenberg, Director of Professional Football at Leverkusen, was in Rotterdam to watch Thiaw against Feyenoord. And now the 23-year-old is a hot topic at the club. WAZ report that €25m is a fee that has been mentioned, and 2. Bundesliga side Schalke could benefit. Should Thiaw leave Milan before 2027, when his contract expires, then S04 could be in for a payday. They will receive 10 percent of any future transfer fee, meaning they could pocket around €2.5m. Advertisement After being an indispensable player for Milan in the early stages of last season, Thiaw found himself on the bench for seven of Milan's final nine Serie A games of the season. A departure from the Lombardy club is conceivable and Thiaw would be open to returning to Germany. GGFN | Daniel Pinder


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Lamine Yamal: Teenage superstar stars as Spain beats France in Nations League semifinal goalfest
CNN — Before a ball was even kicked on Thursday, the UEFA Nations League semifinal between France and Spain was billed as a clash of two modern greats, and the match certainly didn't disappoint. Inspired by the likes of teenage superstar Lamine Yamal, La Roja managed to get the better of the goalfest, beating Les Bleus 5-4 in an all-time classic. The result means Spain will progress through to the final where it will face Portugal on June 8. The nine-goal thriller, the highest scoring match in the tournament's short history, is perhaps less surprising when you consider the number of world-class forwards on the pitch. France boasted attacking talents such as Kylian Mbappé, as well as Champions League heroes Désiré Doué and Ousmane Dembélé, but it was 17-year-old Spanish star Yamal who once again stole the show. The teenager scored two goals in the match and produced another memorable performance which has perhaps convinced even more people of his Ballon d'Or credentials. 'When two great teams like this play, you sometimes see a lot of goals,' Yamal said after the match. 'They will make you suffer until the end, but we went to the final despite the mistakes we made. We were aware of what we wanted to do. We wanted to make history. The greatest thing when you are winning is to keep winning.' Yamal scores his first goal of the semifinal from the penalty spot. Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters The youngster had a part to play in Spain's opening goal, beating his man on the right wing before crossing into the box. The ball was brilliantly held up by Mikel Oyarzabal before the striker teed up Nico Williams who rifled his finish into the roof of the net in the 22nd minute. Just three minutes later and the Euro 2024 champions had doubled their lead. Oyarzabal once again provided the assist, but this time it was Arsenal man Mikel Merino who produced the finish as Spain took a 2-0 lead going into the break. The second half saw more free-flowing attacking play and Yamal soon got on the scoresheet. The winger was brought down in the box and stepped up to take the subsequent penalty. Despite his age, Yamal looked confident before passing his spotkick into the back of the net in the 53rd minute. Two minutes later and France found itself 4-0 down, after midfielder Pedri produced a wonderfully chipped finish to seemingly put the game to bed. But it was then time for France and Mbappé to take center stage. The Real Madrid striker responded with a penalty of his own in the 59th minute to cut the deficit to 4-1. But the French revival was cut short by Yamal, after the youngster raced onto a through ball to poke Spain 5-1 ahead. France comeback falls short Perhaps confident of the victory, Spain seemed to take its foot off the gas which opened the door for a possible comeback from Les Bleus. Debutant Rayan Cherki scored the goal of the game in the 79th minute, with his sweetly struck volley making it 5-2. An own-goal from Spain's Dani Vivian then gave France a glimmer of hope in the closing stages and the comeback was almost complete when Randal Kolo Muani made it 5-4 in added time. France almost came close to completing an amazing comeback. Annegret Hilse/Reuters But France simply ran out of time and looked frustrated when the referee blew his whistle for full-time. 'We had some bursts of play we haven't had for a long time,' Mbappé said after the game, trying to sum up the frantic 90 minutes. 'But in just 10 minutes of the first half, we conceded two goals – and the same thing happened in the second half.' Spain's win now sets up a brilliant all-Iberian final against Portugal, which will see 17-year-old Yamal come up against 40-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo in a battle of two generational greats.