Ronaldo rescues Portugal Ronaldo clenches his fist and spends a moment alone after he gave his nation’s supporters another reason to be hopeful. — DailyMail.
Ronaldo clenches his fist and spends a moment alone after he gave his nation’s supporters another reason to be hopeful. — DailyMail.

Ronaldo clenches his fist and spends a moment alone after he gave his nation’s supporters another reason to be hopeful. — DailyMail.

Stade des Lumieres. — Cristiano Ronaldo scored two trademark brilliant goals Wednesday to go into European Championship history and rescue Portugal in a 3-3 draw that took them into the last 16.

The Real Madrid ace became the first player to score at four European championship finals and his 17th match in a Euro tournament was also a record.

The 31-year-old opened his account in style with a deft backheel flick on 50 minutes, then a bullet header 12 minutes later to twice equalise at the Stade de Lyon.

The result left Hungary on top of Group F. Portugal squeezed through as one of the best third-place finishers, but now face a tough tie against Croatia.

“It was an insane match,” said man-of-the-match Ronaldo.

“We had to chase down the match, it was very hot, but the main goal was to qualify.

“I can’t say I’m not happy, these are good records, but the priority was to make it through to the 16,” Ronaldo added. Following their draws with Iceland and Austria, Portugal’s captain had been feeling the pressure.

He threw a TV reporter’s microphone in a lake on the morning of the game in Lyon.

But he delivered when it mattered as Portugal equalised three times in a topsy-turvy match.

Hungary captain Balazs Dzsudzsak matched Ronaldo by netting two second-half goals as the mighty Magyars continued to surprise by winning the group.

Three draws were enough to see Portugal advance in third behind Iceland.

Hungary took the lead in sweltering conditions at the Stade de Lyon when veteran midfielder Zoltan Gera unleashed a thunderbolt.

There appeared nothing on when Portugal fail to clear a corner, but the 37-year-old Gera belted a low left-footed drive into the bottom-right corner which gave Portugal goalkeeper Rui Patricio no chance on 19 minutes.

At the other end, Hungary goalkeeper Gabor Kiraly, who has made grey sweatpants the must-have fashion item back home, saved a swirling Ronaldo free-kick on 29 minutes.

Nani had the ball in the Hungary net five minutes from the break, but his effort was ruled offside.

The Fenerbahce forward was not to be denied, though, when his crisp finish, after a lovely pass in from Ronaldo, put Portugal level on 42 minutes.

The game burst into life with four goals in the opening 20 minutes of the second-half.

Hungary regained the lead just two minutes after the break when Dzsudzsak’s well-struck free-kick took a slight deflection off the Portugal wall on 47 minutes.

Yet, with his country in need, Ronaldo came up trumps.

The Real superstar made sure he would leave Lyon with two records when he flicked his shot past Kiraly on 50 minutes to make it 2-2.

But Portugal’s second equaliser only served to galvanise Hungary’s resolve.

Dzsudzsak drilled a free-kick off the wall, but pounced on the rebound and his left-footed shot deflected off Nani, past Rui Patricio, into the far corner on 55 minutes for a 3-2 lead.

There was, however, no denying Ronaldo.

Just moments after coming on, Ricardo Quaresma fired in a corner and Ronaldo drove his header past Kiraly on 62 minutes.

By now it was end-to-end stuff as Hungary’s attacking midfielder Akos Elek hit the woodwork on 64 minutes, but it stayed 3-3 at the final whistle.

As Hungary’s German coach Bernd Storck put it: “We didn’t give them many chances, but whenever Ronaldo has the ball, he can score.

“We all know he’s a world class player and you can’t control him.”

Meanwhile, substitute Arnor Ingvi Traustason’s last-gasp winner fired Iceland past Austria 2-1 in their final Group F match at Euro 2016 on Wednesday to book a last-16 showdown with England.

Jon Dadi Bodvarsson swept Iceland into an 18th-minute lead at the Stade de France, with Austria paying dearly for Aleksandar Dragovic’s missed first-half penalty. Alessandro Schopf came off the bench to level for Austria on the hour, but Traustason’s 94th-minute strike condemned Marcel Koller’s side to a premature exit.

Iceland, the smallest nation to appear at a major finals, will play England in the last 16 in Nice after finishing second in the group, behind Hungary but above Portugal, following a thrilling 3-3 draw in Lyon.

“I think everybody who was watching the game realised how much it meant to us. We were willing to sacrifice everything to win,” said Iceland’s joint coach Heimir Hallgrimsson.

“We were lucky on occasions but showed fantastic mentality throughout and there were a lot of tired legs.” — AFP.

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