Goal>>> Cristiano Ronaldo is back from the dead and back in the groove. The Real Madrid attacker came into the Champions League quarter-final clash away to Bayern Munich without a goal in 613 minutes of European football but reports of the 32-year-old's demise were greatly exaggerated.
On Wednesday night at the Allianz Arena, he found his shooting boots just when he was most needed to leave Los Blancos within touching distance of the last four.
The Portuguese usually converts for fun in the continental competition, yet he had failed to register since scoring against Borussia Dortmund early on in the group stage and even that had only been his second strike in Europe. Two in eight games prior to this one.
That led many to question whether he could still do it against the very best, while former Madrid midfielder and coach Bernd Schuster even claimed the four-time Ballon d'Or winner had lost his appetite for goals
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In last season's Champions League, Ronaldo netted 16 times in 12 games en route to the trophy, but all of those strikes were scored against teams that failed to qualify for the competition this time around: Malmo, Shakhtar Donetsk, Roma and Wolfsburg.
However, it would be a brave man to write off Ronaldo and he came good early in the second half with a clinical finish as Real sought a way back into the game after Arturo Vidal's header had given Bayern the lead in the opening period.
Vidal also blasted a (highly dubious) penalty over the crossbar late in the first half and it looks like the tie turned on that moment because after the interval, Madrid came out with much more intensity and found their reward with Ronaldo's equaliser on 47 minutes, when he beat Manuel Neuer with a precise right-footed effort from a Dani Carvajal cross.
Javi Martinez was then sent off for kicking the Portuguese and after that, Madrid edged closer and closer to a winning goal. Bayern were hanging on and there was Cristiano again to poke through Neuer's legs after substitute Marco Asensio had curled in an inviting ball to the 32-year-old.
Bayern boss Carlo Ancelotti had praised Ronaldo before the game and said he hoped his former player would start the game on the bench. And ironically, Cristiano had fought to try and keep the Italian coach at Madrid when the writing was on the wall for ex-Milan trainer.
Under Ancelotti, Ronaldo and Madrid produced one of their most dynamic displays of recent times at the Allianz Arena in 2014 when Real ran out 4-0 winners and the Portuguese scored twice in the semi-final second leg to set a new Champions League goals record of 17 in a single season.
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