Published: 2025-07-07 23:22:41 | Views: 11
There was drama in Geneva as Diana Gomes struck late to salvage Portugal’s European Championship hopes. In a breathtaking conclusion to the Group B encounter, Cristiana Girelli thought she had sent Italy through to the quarter-finals. Francisco Neto’s side piled on the pressure in the final stages, however, and equalised in the 89th minute to ensure their dreams of progress remained alive.
There had been contrasting fortunes on the opening day for both. While Italy earned a hard-fought victory over Belgium, Portugal had suffered a morale-sapping defeat against Spain. This was not quite last chance saloon for Neto’s side but almost, knowing they must avoid defeat to avoid elimination.
It was most likely for this reason that the Portuguese manager rang the changes. Prior to this match, they had conceded 25 in the last five – a defensive record that will never bring success at this level. Goalkeeper Patrícia Morais came in for Joana Marchão to gain her 99th cap while Ana Borges and Joana Marchao brought considerable experience into defence. They were given a significant boost with the return of Kika Nazareth for the first time since suffering an ankle injury in March. The 22-year-old playmaker was making her long-awaited return against the side she made her senior international debut against just five years previous.
Italy, meanwhile, had impressed against Belgium and manager Soncin stuck with the same team that had served them so well. Girelli had the armband once again, making her 121st appearance for her country.
Portugal’s Borges and Andreia Jacinto had emphasised pre-match the need for a fast start and to remain tight early on to end their recent habit of conceding early. They were compact throughout the first half, repelling Italy’s advances and even dominated the ball without creating anything of real note. When they did break, Soncin’s well-drilled team dropped quickly to defend the space in behind and counter the speed of the likes of Diana Silva.
Le Azzurre, in contrast, saw less of possession but created the best opportunities. Girelli was at the heart of the action and forced a world-class stop from Morais early on before turning a well-delivered Manuela Giugliano cross wide.
Portugal rode their luck at times. Cecilia Salvai came so close to making her mark on the international stage after missing the last three major tournaments with injury but saw her header agonisingly crash off the bar. Emma Severini had a goal ruled out for offside before the Portugal goalkeeper was on hand once again to keep her team in the contest. When Girelli met Sofia Cantore’s low cross, the ball looked destined for the back of the net but Morais instinctively stuck out a foot to superbly block it away. She turned fist-pumping to the fans behind the goal, celebrating as if she had scored a goal.
The second half was a quiet affair until the game burst into life with 20 minutes left to play.
Girelli is a character that embodies women’s football in Italy and she made her mark on this competition with a spectacular curling effort that gave Morais no chance. As the tears fell in celebration, the significance of the moment was etched all over the forward’s face.
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Neto’s side had not read the memo, however, and launched an energetic response as they piled the pressure on Italy’s goal. Diana Silva thought she had levelled when she turned a rebound effort home only for a lengthy VAR check to rule it out for offside.
Not to be deterred, Portugal continued to push forward and finally got their rewards thanks to a sweetly guided finish from Diana Gomes with a minute left on the clock. Jubilant celebrations followed as Neto’s side breathed fresh life into their campaign.
There was still time for Ana Borges to receive a second yellow but it mattered little as Portugal go into their final game against Belgium knowing they have the chance to reach the knockouts. Italy have it all to do in a tough encounter with Spain.