Ronaldo a welsh rare bit

Juventus 1 Real Madrid 4: Cristiano Ronaldo fires Los Blancos to historic second successive Champions League triumph

It was not meant to be for Gianluigi Buffon and his team-mates as they ran out of steam in the second half in Cardiff

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THE torrent of honours, records and eye-popping scoring stats are becoming frankly ridiculous.

As Real Madrid achieved the mighty feat of becoming the first side to retain the European Cup during the Champions League era, Cristiano Ronaldo somehow managed to make it all about him.

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Real Madrid defended their Champions League trophy in WalesCredit: Getty Images

In the past 53 weeks, he has been a European champion THREE times, twice with Real and once with Portugal.


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He has won the World Player of the Year award and the Spanish title, he has surpassed 50 goals for the season, 100 Champions League goals and career total of 600 for club and country.

Perhaps most remarkably of all, Ronaldo has netted ten goals in five games from the quarter-finals onwards in this season’s Champions League.

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He helped himself to five against Bayern Munich, a hat-trick against Atletico and two here in Cardiff against a wonderful Juventus side who did not deserve to lose — simply for the extraordinary nature of their equaliser, scored by Mario Mandzukic.

Cristiano Ronaldo was lifted in the air by his team-matesCredit: Getty Images
Real Madrid wildly celebrated Cristiano Ronaldo's second goalCredit: Reuters
Gianluigi Buffon looked heartbroken after the matchCredit: Reuters
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Cristiano Ronaldo fell to his knees in celebration at full timeCredit: Getty Images

The exceptional quality of this final was a reminder of the exalted level Ronaldo operates at.

To be outstanding in this sort of company takes some doing.

And to think Gareth Bale was supposed to depose him as Madrid’s kingpin when he broke the Portuguese’s world transfer record with his £86million move back in 2013.

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Former Real Madrid star Sami Khedira spoke with Cristiano Ronaldo at full timeCredit: Getty Images
Cristiano Ronaldo stroked the ball into the back of netCredit: Getty Images
Ronaldo became the first player to score three goals in a Champions League finalCredit: Reuters
Dani Carvajal held the trophy above his head as he celebratedCredit: Getty Images
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There was a Godzilla-sized billboard of Bale looming over what they now call the Principality Stadium.

But the boyo of the Bernabeu was left on the bench at the start, following a season wrecked by injury which has left his future in some doubt.

Isco has been outstanding during the Welshman’s absence and an immediate return to the starting line-up for the hometown hero would have smacked of the kind of star obsession Real left behind after the Galactico era of Zinedine Zidane’s playing days.

Gareth Bale lifted the Champions League in his home nationCredit: Reuters
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James Rodriguez posed with the trophy after failing to make the squadCredit: Reuters

This was too serious for any thoughts of marketing or sentimentality, this was a quest to make history — and Zidane, after just 16 months as a manager, now has two Champions Leagues, one La Liga, one European Super Cup and a World Club Championship.

Not bad for starters.

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No team had retained the European Cup since AC Milan in 1990 — so long ago that Carlo Ancelotti was actually playing in the final against Benfica — and it was a very different competition back then, the winners only having to play nine matches in total.

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In the Champions League era, keeping hold of the thing had seemingly become impossible. But despite the vast experience of their opponents, Real travelled with great hope after their first domestic title in five years.

Real Madrid players celebrated on the turf in the finalCredit: Getty Images
Cristiano Ronaldo and his son met Sir Alex Ferguson in the tunnelCredit: Getty Images
Luka Modric kissed the trophy as he pointed his finger in the airCredit: Getty Images
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With the stadium’s roof closed and both sets of supporters making enough noise to allow us to forget the tens of thousands of corporate suits who somehow get tickets for this showpiece, the stage was set for a classic between two of world football’s super powers.

It was a pity Uefa could not manage to get the fixture to kick off on time — the Black Eyed Peas and a dance troupe somehow allowed to keep two sets of players pent up in the tunnel, before it got under way four minutes late.

Sergio Ramos posed with the trophyCredit: Reuters
Mario Mandzukic scored an unforgettable goal in CardiffCredit: Reuters
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The Croatia international equalised for Juve in the 27th minuteCredit: Reuters

Not that it was not worth a far longer wait. The tempo was breathless, the passing impossibly crisp and rhythmic, the tackling as bone-jarring as you would expect with Sergio Ramos, Giorgio Chiellini and Leonardo Bonucci on the same pitch.

Juventus created the first opening when Miralem Pjanic’s 20-yard drive forced Keylor Navas to plunge low to his right. Soon, though, it was Ronaldo time. The World Player of the Year collected the ball from Karim Benzema and exchanged passes with Dani Carvajal before he pinged a first-time shot into the corner of the net via a slight, but possibly crucial, deflection off Bonucci.

Zinedine Zidane proudly held the trophy as Madrid won their second successive Champions LeagueCredit: EPA
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Cristiano Ronaldo fist pumped the air with his medal around his neckCredit: Getty Images

It was a marvellous passing move, yet seven minutes later it was comprehensively blown out of the water as a spectacle.

What happened then was just about the most mesmeric move ever witnessed in a major football match, up there with Brazil’s fourth goal in the 1970 World Cup final. Bonucci, just inside the Real half, looked up and played a 40-yard diagonal pass to Alex Sandro on the left wing.

The ball never touched the deck again until it had hit the net — Sandro’s cushioned volley of a centre to Gonzalo Higuain, who chested it and flicked a pass to Mandzukic.

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Gianluigi Buffon looked distraught at full timeCredit: Getty Images
Casemiro pulled the trigger from long rangeCredit: Getty Images
Casemiro's goal regained the lead for Los Blancos in the 61st minuteCredit: Reuters

Chesting down, with his back to goal and Carvajal tight behind him, the Croatian forward suddenly imagined himself executing a bicycle kick from the edge of the box — and so he looped one over Navas in a gorgeous arc.

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For its teamwork, the quality of its finish and the importance of the occasion, it is difficult to remember a better goal.

Real started the second half purposefully and Luka Modric forced a decent save from Gigi Buffon.

Cristiano Ronaldo wheeled away after making it 3-1Credit: PA:Press Association
Gianluigi Buffon stood no chance as Cristiano Ronaldo scored from close rangeCredit: Getty Images
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Then the quick, decisive one-two from Real. Toni Kroos had a shot blocked and the rebound ran to Casemiro, who hammered it from 30 yards — Sami Khedira turning his back and helping it on its way past Buffon.

Three minutes later it was all over, a pass down the right flank from Carvajal was superbly cut back from the by-line by Modric and Ronaldo nipped in at the front stick to tuck it home.

Juan Cuadrado was sent off, thanks to some Ramos theatrics, and young Marco Asensio added a fourth from Marcelo’s cut-back.

Almost unnoticed, Bale had made it on as a late sub for Benzema.

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But even on the green, green grass of home, he was never going to take the limelight away from Ronaldo.

Juan Cuadrado received a second yellow card for pushing Sergio RamosCredit: Getty Images
Sergio Ramos theatrically hit the deck after he was pushed by Juan CuadradoCredit: Getty Images
The referee sent off the winger who came on as a sub in the 66th minuteCredit: Getty Images
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Sergio Ramos hugged Marco Asensio after his goalCredit: Reuters
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