Euro 2016 final is '˜Griezmann v Ronaldo, Part 2'

Cristiano Ronaldo and Antoine Griezmann will meet for another title showdown when Portugal face France in the European Championship final tomorrow, just six weeks after they contested the Champions League final.
Antoine Griezmann and Cristiano Ronaldo will go head-to-head six weeks after they clashed in the Champions League final. Photograph: Getty ImagesAntoine Griezmann and Cristiano Ronaldo will go head-to-head six weeks after they clashed in the Champions League final. Photograph: Getty Images
Antoine Griezmann and Cristiano Ronaldo will go head-to-head six weeks after they clashed in the Champions League final. Photograph: Getty Images

Ronaldo was on the winning side with Real Madrid at the continental showpiece in Milan, with the Portugal captain scoring the decisive spot kick in a penalty shoot-out against Griezmann’s Atletico Madrid.

This time, Ronaldo could be in for a disappointment.

Not only will France have the host nation crowd behind them at the Stade de France on the outskirts of Paris, but Griezmann has been on 
sparkling form with a tournament-leading six goals – 
double the tally of Ronaldo, who has toiled and grumbled his way through Portugal’s stodgy campaign.

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“We’re thrilled, we feel like kids,” Griezmann said. “We know the whole country is behind us, so we’re giving 
everything for them.”

Both goals in France’s 
semi-final victory over World Cup holders Germany were scored by Griezmann, who managed to convert a penalty past Manuel Neuer in Marseille on Thursday evening to ease the pain of missing one in the Champions League final 
in May.

“He’s had a great tournament but we won’t just be focusing on him,” Portugal midfielder Joao Mario said yesterday of Griezmann.

If Griezmann can keep up his scoring run and deliver silverware for his nation, the 25-year-old forward would not only collect his first major trophy but potentially become a challenger to Ronaldo for the Ballon D’Or.

Griezmann, however, only needs to glimpse into Ronaldo’s early career to see how a host nation can be upstaged in a European Championship final. Ronaldo has waited 12 years, since Portugal lost to Greece at Euro 2004, for another shot at national glory with every major club honour now gathered.

Ronaldo has only scored in two of Portugal’s six games in France, and yet he is only one goal away from scoring a tenth European Championship goal and breaking Michel Platini’s 32-year record.

But France’s pedigree in finals is far stronger than Portugal’s, particularly at home where the prize was collected at the 1984 European Championship and 1998 World Cup. The only time France have won silverware away from Paris was Euro 2000, while the sole final loss was on penalties to Italy at the 2006 World Cup.

France have won their last ten games against Portugal, whose last victory over the hosts came in 1975. And Fernando Santos, who began his reign 21 months ago with a loss to France in the Stade de France, has seen his team win only once inside 90 minutes at Euro 2016 – against Wales in the semi-finals.

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“Criticism is part of football, we know that’s how things work,” Mario said. “We don’t think about this type of criticisms. We want to win to make the Portuguese happy and go down in history.”

That could hinge on 
whether Pepe recovers from the thigh muscle injury that kept him out of the 2-0 victory over Wales. The central defender trained away from his team-mates yesterday morning, only doing ball 
work with a member of the Portuguese staff.

The key decision for Deschamps seems to be whether to restore N’Golo Kante to the starting line-up and drop Moussa Sissoko. France have only failed to win one of their games in the tournament, a 0-0 draw with Switzerland in the group stage.

“We’ve grown,” midfielder Paul Pogba said. “We’re more mature.”

Winning the final would be a cathartic experience for a country still in a state of emergency following a wave of extremist attacks across Paris on 13 November that killed 130 people. The attacks began at the Stade de France, where suicide bombers detonated devices after failing to force their way into France’s match against Germany. The sole victim at the stadium was a chauffeur, who was born in Portugal.

Intense safety measures have been in place at the ten stadiums hosting the tournament and there have been no major security incidents over the last month. The country, though, is still scarred by last year’s atrocities.

“We don’t have the power to solve people’s problems,” France coach Didier Deschamps said, reflecting on the national trauma. “But we can generate emotions so 
they forget their worries. We generate passion and fervour. We can see that.”