It couldтАЩve been because he used the word тАЬunfairтАЭ to describe the exit of defending champions Portugal from Euro 2020 that coach Fernando Santos immediately felt the urge to back up his remark. What he ended up doing instead was to summarise the idiosyncrasies of not just Sunday nightтАЩs match in Seville, but of the game itself at the international majors.
тАЬThey (Belgium) had six shots, one on target. We had 29 and couldnтАЩt even score from one,тАЭ said Santos, understandably wearing the тАЬunfairnessтАЭ of it all on his fa├зade. тАЬThey scored, we didnтАЩtтАФthe ball hit the post. My players tried their best but the ball wouldnтАЩt go in, thatтАЩs football.тАЭ SantosтАЩs best player, Cristiano Ronaldo, was perhaps even more elegant in his summation immediately after the final whistle when he pulled Thibaut Courtois, Belgium goalie and former Real Madrid mate, into a hug and was captured saying: тАЬYou got lucky, eh? The ball just wouldnтАЩt get in today.тАЭ
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If Ronaldo says it didnтАЩt, it most certainly didnтАЩt. Not when Renato Sanches released Diogo Jota into the Belgian box as early as the 5th minute, only for the Liverpool midfielder to scythe the golden opportunity wide. And certainly not in the 25th minute when Ronaldo himself towered over the stationary ball and got his free-kick to swoop around the Belgian bodies forming a wall along the D but not around CourtoisтАЩs gloves.
This set the tone for PortugalтАЩs lack of luck, as Ronaldo put it, late in the second half when a real flurry of chances went abegging. Jota messed another chance from the box, this time hoofing it impossibly over the crossbar; a close-range Ruben Dias header was volleyball-punched to safety; Andre Silva even managed to get the ball behind Courtois but not behind the goal-line; and, finally, Raphael Guerreiro smacked the post before Santos smacked his own forehead.
The truth, however, is that every chance squandered by Portugal was but a mini-battle won by Belgium, who finally proved at La Cartuja that they too could get comfortable with grime under their fingernails. For far too long this golden generation of Belgium has looked its proverbial million dollars at the majors until almost always losing when confronted by a team playing dirty, gritty football. On Sunday, the best ranked national football team in the world, one with no trophies to show for their ranking, proved that they too could get dirty; that they too could rope-a-dope.
Sure, in the recent past Belgium did manage a surreal turnaround against Japan at the World Cup in 2018тАФalso at the Round of 16 stageтАФwhen Roberto MartinezтАЩs boys found themselves 2-0 down with just over 20 minutes to go and yet scored the winner in the 94th minute. But sometimes holding on to a slender lead can prove to be tougher and nervier than an all-out counterattack, mainly because the Belgium trailing Japan had nothing to lose and everything to gain; unlike the Belgium of Sunday night, who had a goal and a reputation to protect.
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As phenomenal as Thorgan HazardтАЩs goal was (it was struck with the outside of the younger HazardтАЩs right boot, giving the ball enough swerve and rip to narrowly fizz past a diving Rui Patricio in PortugalтАЩs goal) it was well against the rhythm and flow of the night, which was otherwise all about rues and regrets. So much so that at one point Romelu Lukaku held his head in utter disbelief, because substitute Yannick Carrasco went for goal through a thicket of legs instead of passing to him standing unmarked on the edge of the box. And at another, Lukaku glared and frothed at Dries MertensтАФwho had recently come on for Kevin de Bruyne.
BelgiumтАЩs No.7 had limped out at the beginning of the second half and by the end, so did Eden Hazard (will he soon come to be known as ThorganтАЩs brother?). With two of their greatest players out injured (there is no clarity over their immediate future in the tournament), Belgium still resisted. This, then, was their other great gain of the night: eking out a messy, flairless win without much help from the greats. But thatтАЩs the thing with getting used to the dirtтАФsometimes you find diamonds. This is Belgium, after all.
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