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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

European Championship: In pursuit of goals, Cristiano Ronaldo and Kylian Mbappe collide to stay in orbit

'Let’s go, let’s go to war,' Ronaldo said of the match against France, whom he considers as the top contenders

AP/PTI Hamburg Published 05.07.24, 10:00 AM
Kylian Mbappe and (right) Cristiano Ronaldo at practice, ahead of the quarter final in Hamburg

Kylian Mbappe and (right) Cristiano Ronaldo at practice, ahead of the quarter final in Hamburg Getty Images & X

Cristiano Ronaldo vs Kylian Mbappe.

A clash of football icons. A clash of generations.

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They’ll go head to head when Portugal play France in the Euro 2024 quarter finals on Friday, and this heavyweight meeting might have got just that little bit bigger.

“It is, without doubt, my last European Championship,” the 39-year-old Ronaldo said after his tearful, emotionally charged performance in Portugal’s penalty-shootout victory over Slovenia in the last 16.

That may have just confirmed what many were presuming anyway.

Still, there’s now a definitive spectre of finality to Ronaldo’s long, headline-grabbing Euros adventure that could be brought to an end by Mbappe, the heir apparent to Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.

Mbappe grew up with pictures of Ronaldo on his bedroom wall.

A photo is inevitably doing the rounds on social media of what is apparently their first-ever meeting, at Real Madrid’s training ground at Valdebebas in 2012 when a 13-year-old Mbappe stood beside Ronaldo after a visit to the Spanish club where his sporting hero was the star player.

In 2020, Mbappe posted on Twitter, now X, that Ronaldo was his “idol.”

And only a few months ago, Ronaldo reacted to Mbappe clinching a highly anticipated move to Madrid by writing on Instagram: “Excited to see you light up the Bernabeu.”

That Mbappe can now end Ronaldo’s European Championship career — who knows, it might even be his last ever major tournament — adds an intriguing subplot to a match that will be watched around the world.

“Let’s go, let’s go to war,” Ronaldo said of the match against France, whom he considers as the top contenders at Euro 2024 along with Spain.

He said he was driven to tears against Slovenia not at the prospect of elimination but because his main motivation these days is “making people happy” and he had a penalty saved in extra time.

“I’m moved by all that football means — by the enthusiasm I have for the game, the enthusiasm for seeing my supporters, my family, the affection people have for me.

“It’s not about leaving the world of football. What else is there for me to do or win?”

Ronaldo heads into Friday’s game having failed to score in eight straight matches at major tournaments and with growing concerns about whether he deserves what appears to be a guaranteed spot in the team under Roberto Martinez.

Things haven’t been straightforward for Mbappe, either, at Euro 2024.

He sustained a broken nose in France’s group opener against Austria and has since been wearing a vision-limiting protective facemask during games. Mbappe has scored one goal and that was from the penalty spot against Poland — it’s the only goal scored by a France player at these Euros.

“He will have to get used to it,” France coach Didier Deschamps said of Mbappe
and his mask, “because, to protect (his nose), he will have to wear it for a few weeks — or even a few months.”

Few would have predicted the top scorer at the last World Cup (Mbappe) and the record scorer in men’s international football (Ronaldo) to have just one goal between them heading into the quarter-finals.

As captains, they’ll shake hands and embrace before kickoff in Hamburg. You can bet they’ll do the same after the match.

After that, one of them will head home.

For Mbappe, there will surely be more down the road. For Ronaldo, this could be the end of the road.

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