Cristiano Ronaldo gave his former coach one more dazzling display of
his skills, and delivered a trophy to Real Madrid in the process.
Ronaldo scored a pair of highlight goals, lifting Real Madrid to a
3-1 victory over Chelsea in the final of the Guinness International
Champions Cup on Wednesday night.
"We played beautiful football," Ronaldo said.
Marcelo Vieira also scored for Real, which became the event's
inaugural champion by topping a Chelsea club now being coached by Jose
Mourinho. He left Madrid earlier this year for a return to Chelsea, and
after years of enjoying watching Ronaldo frustrate opponents, it was
Mourinho who couldn't find a way to stop him.
"He's a great player," Mourinho said. "If he scores goals, that is not news. If he doesn't score goals, that would be news."
Ramires scored for Chelsea, which posted a pair of shutouts to get
into the championship match before 67,273 fans at Sun Life Stadium, home
of the NFL's Miami Dolphins.
The colorful Mourinho took what were considered a few subtle jabs at
Real Madrid leading up to the Guinness final, though Ronaldo took the
high ground when asked about his former coach before the match.
After the final whistle Wednesday, though, Ronaldo clearly was
enjoying the moment - but insisted that his two after-goal celebrations
were not in any way directed toward Mourinho.
"I don't worry about the other people," Ronaldo said.
This match, the finale of an eight-team tournament, was supposed to
be merely an exhibition between two strong teams, part of their
preseason preparations.
The way they played certainly didn't suggest that either side found this one to be meaningless.
"I would expect those two teams to play it seriously," said Los
Angeles Galaxy forward Landon Donovan, whose team fell to AC Milan
earlier Wednesday in the third-place match of the eight-team event.
Donovan was proven correct.
With the match tied at 1 in the 30th minute, Ronaldo was the
recipient of a hard foul from behind by Branislav Ivanovic. Ronaldo
merely smiled as he sat on the turf, adjusting his uniform while most of
the other players convened for a bit of shouting.
Ronaldo got his revenge on the resulting free kick. From about 25
yards, his strike curled to the left, sneaking just under the crossbar
and off the fingertips of diving goalkeeper Petr Cech.
And in the 57th minute, Ronaldo struck again, perfectly timing his
run toward the goal line and sending in a header for a two-goal
advantage. That left Mourinho with a blank expression, and the outcome
essentially decided.
Ronaldo had the crowd frenzied at that point, including one fan who
got onto the field later in the game. Wearing a Ronaldo jersey, he was
able to not just get to the Real Madrid star, but wrap him in an embrace
near the sideline and share some words for several seconds before
police officers escorted the man off the field.
It was the tournament's last bit of drama. From the moment the
bracket came out this spring, many expected that it would be a
Real-Chelsea final and serve as a reunion for Mourinho — who raised
eyebrows by calling the Brazilian player Ronaldo, who is retired, "the
real Ronaldo," a phrase that served as the perceived shot at the Real
star - and his former club.
"It's not my movie. ... It's not my problem," Mourinho said.
Real opened the scoring in the 14th minute. Vieira dribbled into the
penalty area and skipped a shot through defender Gary Cahill and into
the right side of the net.
Chelsea got the equalizer quickly. Ramires split two defenders and
went in against goalkeeper Iker Casillas, who charged off his line to
cut down the angle. His effort was in vain, as Ramires flicked the ball
softly over him and into the net.
Chelsea had three great chances in the first seven minutes of the
second half to tie it again, the best of those when Eden Hazard got
behind a defender and carried the ball in alone against Casillas. The
keeper sprung off his line to make the save and protect the one-goal
lead.
Ronaldo's second goal came five minutes later, and it was followed by an emphatic celebration.
"I only concentrate on what happens on the field," Ronaldo said.
"What happens outside the field does not affect me. My only job is to
help Real Madrid."
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