Cristiano Ronaldo’s career takes a massive turn from crisis to glory
Manchester: Cristiano Ronaldo is on the brink of leading Portugal to another major football tournament less than a year after his international career appeared to be over.
It wasn’t clear what the future held for the five-time Champions League winner when he walked away from Manchester United last November and was then dropped by his country as it made an early exit from the World Cup in Qatar.
His move to Saudi Arabia wasn’t exactly a guarantee of success, but Ronaldo has proven he is far from done. On Friday, Portugal can secure their place at next year’s European Championship in Germany.
It will be a personal triumph for Ronaldo, who insisted his career wasn’t over after leaving European club football behind to join Al Nassr last December.
Not only has he been the catalyst for a slew of football’s biggest names, such as Neymar and Karim Benzema, following him to the Saudi league, but he has helped Portugal to their best-ever performance in a European qualifying campaign with six wins from six matches in Group J.
A win against Slovakia on Friday will guarantee qualification and, if Ronaldo is selected, the chance for him to repeat his 2016 triumph with Portugal at the tournament.
Things have also turned around for Portugal coach Roberto Martinez, who left his post as Belgium coach at the end of his contract after failing to advance from the group stage at the World Cup. He had been criticised for failing to make the most of the country’s golden generation that included Eden Hazard, Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku, despite leading the team to the semifinals of the 2018 World Cup and to No 1 in the Fifa rankings — a position it held for four years.
At the time of his appointment, one newspaper poll in Portugal claimed 75 per cent of fans who responded were against it. But Martinez is on the verge of getting another chance to deliver the major trophy he never managed to win for Belgium.
Brilliant Bellingham
Jude Bellingham continued his sensational start with Real Madrid on Saturday by equalling Ronaldo’s record of 10 goals in his first 10 games. That is the best scoring start for Madrid since Ronaldo achieved that feat when he joined from Manchester United in 2009.
Bellingham has emerged as one of the brightest stars in Europe since the departures of Ronaldo and Neymar for Saudi Arabia and Lionel Messi for Inter Miami. He is now a key figure in the England team, which plays Italy at Wembley Stadium next week in a repeat of the Euro 2020 final.
Mbappe mission
Things haven’t gone too well for Kylian Mbappe at Paris Saint-Germain in what could be his final season at the club, but at least he’s close to qualifying for Euro 2024 with France.
PSG are in third place in the French league and last week lost to Newcastle in the Champions League.
Mbappe, who has said he will leave the club when his contract expires, was initially made to train away from the first team as a result, but was then recalled. That led to renewed hope at PSG that he would extend his contract, but as it stands he will be a free agent at the end of the season.
PSG’s loss to Newcastle also raises questions about its credentials to finally win the Champions League — European club football’s biggest trophy and one that Mbappe craves. The France forward has won several domestic honors with the club.
With the national team, Mbappe won the World Cup in 2018 and finished runner-up last year. At least qualification for next year’s European Championship would give him the opportunity to win another major prize for his country.
Italy’s revival
Napoli’s loss appears to be Italy’s gain. Luciano Spalletti left Napoli at the end of last season after leading the club to their first Serie A title in 33 years and was later appointed Italy coach following Roberto Mancini’s resignation. While Napoli are currently looking like a shadow of the team that won the league title, Spalletti seems to have Italy playing like his former team.
His first match in charge was a drab 1-1 draw at North Macedonia but the attacking flair that characterized Napoli last season was evident in Italy’s 2-1 win over Ukraine that got the Azzurri’s Euro 2024 qualifying campaign back on track.
Italy moved into second place in Group C, above Ukraine on head-to-head record — with the return match scheduled for Nov. 20. The Azzurri have played a game less than Ukraine and England, who lead the group by six points. Italy host Malta on Saturday before playing England at Wembley three days later.