Platini steers France to EURO 1984 final after Portugal semi thriller
sabato 4 ottobre 2003
Intro articolo
France 3-2 Portugal (aet)
With a penalty shoot-out looming, captain Michel Platini sent the Marseille crowd into raptures.
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Corpo articolo
Arguably the most vivid match in the competition's history, in many ways it resembled the famous 1970 FIFA World Cup semi-final between Italy and West Germany as one team held sway for much of the match only to concede a late equaliser. There were more goals in extra time, for both sides, before Michel Platini rose to the occasion with a last-gasp winner.
It was all free-flowing stuff but the first 20 minutes had been riddled with petty fouls and one of these, by Frasco on Platini, led to the opening goal. The French captain shaped to take the kick but left it for Jean-François Domergue to come in from the other side and thump a left-footed shot that went in off João Pinto's head.
Portugal had again picked a second striker to support Rui Jordão, but everything was happening at the other end. In the first few minutes of the second half Bento saved at the feet of Luis Fernández (who put the rebound just wide) and Platini, and kept out two efforts by Alain Giresse, who then blasted just wide. It was one-way traffic, most of it directed by Platini.
But Portugal took heart from being only one down, and eventually Chalana appeared on the left, dinked in a shallow cross and the hard-working Jordão headed in his first goal of the tournament. Bento then made his umpteenth save at the feet of Platini, before touching the ball onto the bar when Didier Six blasted the rebound. It was a splendid double-save from a goalkeeper only two days short of his 36th birthday.
Opposite number Joël Bats had to do his bit in extra time, saving well from Nené – especially as France were a goal behind by this point. Again Chalana provided the cross for Jordão, who volleyed into the ground and into the far top corner. France might have been forgiven for despairing; instead they threw everything into attack, and with six minutes left two defenders were involved in their equaliser. Domergue found Yvon Le Roux, his short pass reaching Platini, who got the ball away to the left as he was tackled for Domergue to score.
Portugal were hanging on for penalties now, but France made one last attempt to win it in open play. When Jean Tigana's pass was blocked, he won the ball back and emptied his lungs to beat a man to the byline. When his low cross cut out Bento it was coolly stopped by Platini and clipped in, to the explosive delight of a partisan crowd.
The sight of Platini running along the touchline with his arms out and a sea of French flags flying in the crowd behind him was the enduring image of the tournament. There was great honour in defeat for Portugal, but no one could begrudge that French midfield its greatest day, especially Platini and the unquenchable Tigana, who made the winner on his 29th birthday.
Reaction
Michel Platini, France midfielder: "Against Portugal [in the semi-finals] we should have been leading 2-0 or 3-0, but they made it 1-1 and then 2-1. We got into the last seven minutes of extra time and we had tremendous will to win; especially as Jean Tigana told us he had never won a penalty shoot-out! We knew we had to avoid going to penalties! Tigana was the one who crossed the ball from the right at the end of the match and I was the one in the centre who hit the ball into the net. That was an exciting game in Marseille and the crowd was wonderful."
Lineups
France: Bats; Domergue, Bossis, Le Roux, Battiston; Giresse, Platini (c), Tigana, Fernández; Six (Bellone 104), Lacombe (Ferreri 66)
Substitutes: none listed
Coach: Michel Hidalgo
Portugal: Manuel Bento (c); Álvaro, Eurico, Lima Pereira, João Pinto; Chalana, Sousa (Nené 62), Jaime Pacheco, Frasco; Diamantino (Fernando Gomes 46), Jordão
Substitutes: none listed
Coach: Fernando Cabrita
Referee: Paolo Bergamo (Italy)