Delight: Gareth Bale scored a vital goal for Real Madrid in extra time in the Champions League final |
Gareth Bale it was at the far post who was on hand to head home when Angel Di Maria’s shot had rebounded off the leg of Thibaut Courtois and fell invitingly for him 20 minutes into extra time
In doing so, as he wheeled away to be engulfed by a mass of celebrating bodies and greeted by a roar of utter relief, redemption was found.
This might have been the final defined by his miss on 32 minutes. Instead Real Madrid have their illusive tenth European Cup, Bale joins an illustrious group of Britons who have won the famous old trophy with foreign clubs and Carlo Ancelotti has equalled Bob Paisley’s record of winning the European Cup three times: all thanks to Bale.
Welsh wonder: Bale with the flag of his home nation as he celebrates Real's victory |
Silverware: Captain Iker Casillas lifts the Champions League trophy for Real Madrid |
Uplifting: Ronaldo gets his hands on the trophy in Lisbon after Real's extra time victory |
Landmark: Real Madrid's players celebrate their 10th European Cup triumph |
Pat on the head: Bale is congratulated by UEFA president Michel Platini as he walks past the trophy |
Behind the scenes: Bale tweeted this picture from the dressing room after the game |
Flashpoint: Atletico Madrid manager Diego Simeone confronts Raphael Varane towards the end of extra time |
Congratulations from the Nou Camp: Barcelona tweeted this after Real's win over Atletico in Lisbon |
How Real were made to work for those milestones; how close they came to failure. Atletico had led 1-0 with three minutes of added time played when Sergio Ramos’ header cruelly denied them a triumph, an almost exact re-run of how they lost this trophy against Bayern Munich in 1974.
In the end it was all too much. Their extraordinary coach, Diego Simeone invaded the pitch before the end to protest, bringing a red card for the Argentine. It was a seemly end to a brave fight for this team constructed at half the cost of Bale’s price tag.
For while recognizing the achievement of Real Madrid – and in the end their sheer willpower and determination not to lose prevailed – it was impossible not to recognize the enormity of Atletico Madrid’s achievement.
Error: Casillas' misjudgement left him stranded and he couldn't prevent Godin's header from finding the net |
Historic: Godin became the first Uruguayan to score in the Champions League final |
Cheerleader: Atletico Madrid manager Diego Simeone whips up the crowd in Lisbon |
They had done so despite losing their totemic striker Diego Costa after just nine minutes, his unlikely recovery from a hamstring injury proving illusory.
Not since Jose Mourinho won this trophy with Porto in 2004 have a team of similar resources done so well. Indeed, Simeone puts you in mind of Nottingham Forest Brian Clough, pitch invasions and all.
It’s not just that they live in the shadow of the richer, more illustrious neighbours; until this time last year and the Copa del Rey final they hadn’t even beaten Real Madrid for 14 years.
Hero: Sergio Ramos headed home in injury time to rescue Real Madrid and send the tie to extra-time |
Relief: Casillas, who made the mistake in the first half, celebrates with Marcelo |
Time was running out; hope was slipping away. Real Madrid’s worst nightmare was unfolding before them, their upstart neighbours about to claim the victory to end all arguments.
Five minutes of injury time were indicated and Simeone was already furious, the first sign of the imminent breakdown. Three minutes into that added time came a corner from Luka Modric.
It was well delivered but the leap of Sergio Ramos and the ferocity of his header was something to behold. It fairly flew into the bottom corner and a good two thirds of the stadium erupted as the Real Madrid bench sprinted to join in the celebrations.
At the last, Real had rescued it and pushed the game into extra time.
Big moment: The £86m Welshman delivered when Real Madrid needed it most in Lisbon |
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