MILAN. — Zinedine Zidane hailed Real Madrid as the “club of my life” after a dramatic Champions League soccer final penalty shoot-out victory over Atletico Madrid that left Diego Simeone pondering his future on Saturday night. Former France and Real Madrid forward Zidane scored the winning goal when Real they beat Bayer Leverkusen 2-1 to lift the title in Glasgow in 2002.

Having been the assistant to Carlo Ancelotti when the Italian coaching great steered Real to the 10th — “La Decima” — title in Lisbon two years ago, Zidane now gets a taste of the trophy for a third time after joining an elite few who have lifted the trophy as a player and a coach.

Once a favourite at Juventus, the 43-year-old Zidane said there is now no other club in his heart.

“I was given the chance to come to this amazing club, and then to coach it. I have a phenomenal team and great players who are also talented, and it was together we achieved what we did tonight,” he said.

“I’ve won the Champions League as a player, as an assistant and now as a head coach. I’m so proud to be part of this great club. It’s the club of my life, the one that made me who I am.

“Carlo Ancelotti wanted me to experience this feeling, as the number one coach, and he was right. I’m so happy.”

Real Madrid captain Sergio Ramos also paid tribute to coach Zidane’s inspirational qualities after the Spanish giants were crowned kings of Europe for the 11th time.

Real claimed their second Champions League trophy in three years thanks to a 5-3 penalty shoot-out victory over Atletico Madrid at Milan’s San Siro after the match had finished 1-1 after extra-time.

All of Real’s players kept their composure to beat opposition goalkeper Jan Oblak from the spot, and when Atletico favourite Juanfran saw his effort come back off the post, Cristiano Ronaldo stepped up and hit the winner.

Ramos has been one of the stars of Real’s latest two triumphs, having scored a late equaliser that pushed the 2014 final into extra-time before hitting the opener on Saturday after just 15 minutes only for Yannick Carrasco to pull Atletico level with 11 minutes remaining in normal time.

But for the man-of-the-match, Zidane’s cool-headedness and leadership skills have helped tighten relations in a Real dressing room that, earlier this season, was not quite as cohesive.

“Zizou (Zidane) is very humble but determined. His arrival was really important for us because he has a great relationship with the players. We’ll be celebrating this with him!” said Ramos.

Zidane was handed the head coach’s position when Rafael Benitez was sacked by Real in January.

And Ramos suggested the Frenchman’s promotion was the turning point of the season.

“With Rafael we had some good times, but when Zizou came the dressing room was more unified,” added Ramos.

“Zidane brought a positive attitude with him.”

It is the third time Zidane has got his hands on the Champions League trophy.

The former France and Real Madrid forward’s superb match-winning volley secured the title for Real in 2002 when they beat Bayer Leverkusen 2-1 in Glasgow.

Ramos added: “It’s an amazing feeling to win the Champions League again after 2014. It’s unforgettable, and will have a special place in my heart.”

Two years ago, Real captain Sergio Ramos levelled at the death to keep Real in the final, before they ran riot in extra-time to prevail 4-1.

Atletico came to Milan determined to make amends, but Simeone’s men were dominated throughout at the San Siro stadium.

A Ramos opener on 15 minutes took the wind out of Atletico’s sails and French striker Antoine Griezmann put them further off course when he slammed a penalty off the underside of the crossbar seconds into the second half.

Despite Yannick Carrasco levelling on 79 minutes, Atletico were undone on penalties after club favourite Juanfran’s effort came off the upright, handing Cristiano Ronaldo the chance to secure Real’s 11th crown with his subsequent spot kick. — AFP.

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