Portuguese rider Paulo Goncalves killed after Dakar crash

Portuguese motorbike rider Paulo Goncalves was competing in his 13th edition of the Dakar before his fatal crash during the seventh stage of the desert race in Saudi Arabia. (Reuters)
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Updated 12 January 2020
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Portuguese rider Paulo Goncalves killed after Dakar crash

  • Fatal crash after 276 kilometers of the day’s ride from Riyadh to Wadi Al Dawasir
  • Paulo Goncalves was competing in his 13th edition of the Dakar rally

WADI AD-DAWASIR, Saudi Arabia: Portuguese motorbike rider Paulo Goncalves has died after a crash during Sunday’s Dakar Rally seventh stage, organizers announced.
The 40-year-old suffered the fatal crash after 276 kilometers of the day’s ride from Riyadh to Wadi Al Dawasir.
“The organizers received an alert at 10:08 (0708 GMT) and dispatched a medical helicopter that reached the biker at 10:16 and found him unconscious after going into cardiac arrest,” a statement on the rally’s official website reported.




Paulo Goncalves died after a crash during the Dakar Rally seventh stage in Saudi Arabia. (AFP/File)


“Following resuscitation efforts in situ, the competitor was taken by helicopter to Layla Hospital, where he was sadly pronounced dead,” it added.
Goncalves was competing in his 13th edition of the Dakar. He made his debut in 2006 when it was staged in Africa, and took second to Marc Coma in 2015 in South America.
The Indian-backed Hero rider only made it to this year’s first Dakar staged in Saudi Arabia after recovering from a fractured spleen in a crash in his native Portugal in December.
Following surgery, he said before the rally got underway: “It’s a victory for me to be here at the start.”
Goncalves was placed 46th in the overall bike standings after Friday’s sixth stage.
He was the 25th Dakar fatality since the inaugural edition of the grueling motorsport marathon in 1979, and the first since Polish rider Michal Hernik was killed in 2015 in Argentina.
“The entire Dakar caravan would like to extend its sincere condolences to his friends and family,” the organizers’ statement said.


Brilliant Bodo/Glimt beat Sporting Lisbon 3-0 in Champions League last-16 first leg

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Brilliant Bodo/Glimt beat Sporting Lisbon 3-0 in Champions League last-16 first leg

  • The Portuguese side showed a ‌glimmer of attacking intent to start the second ​half but it was quickly ‌snuffed out

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN: Another stellar ‌display on their artificial home turf at the Aspmyra Stadium gave Norway’s Bodo/Glimt a 3-0 win over Sporting Lisbon in the first leg of their Champions League last ​16 tie on Wednesday.
The Portuguese side joined the long list of big-name European clubs that have made the journey to the little fishing town inside the Arctic Circle and came away empty-handed as Bodo romped to an easy victory on the night that puts them in the driving seat for a spot in the quarter-finals.
Luis Suarez blazed an early chance over the bar for the visitors but after that their ‌hosts took over, ‌and they went ahead just after the ​half-hour ‌mark ⁠after Giorgos ​Vagiannidis ⁠bundled over Sondre Brunstad Fet in the box.
After a VAR check, the midfielder confidently stroked home the penalty he had won to give his side the lead.
The hosts were 2-0 up by the break, and though there was a slice of luck involved as Jens Petter Hauge’s through ball deflected into the path of Ole Didrik Blomberg, there was nothing lucky about ⁠his superb finish from a tight angle to double ‌his side’s advantage.
The Portuguese side showed a ‌glimmer of attacking intent to start the second ​half but it was quickly ‌snuffed out.
Bodo should have gone three up in the 55th minute after ‌the ball pinged around in the box before eventually going out of play, with defender Jostein Gundersen heading the resulting corner straight at the keeper.
In total control of the game, Bodo grabbed the third goal their efforts deserved when Danish ‌striker Kasper Hogh rounded off another fairytale effort, stealing between two defenders to deftly steer Hauge’s low ⁠cross from the ⁠left into the net from close range in the 71st minute.
The 3-0 win, Bodo’s fifth straight victory in the competition, leaves Sporting Lisbon with a mountain to climb in the second leg, which will take place in Lisbon next Tuesday.
“It was fun to play again, a fantastic round of 16 game — we still have a long way to go, but the result is fantastic. It will be an exciting week now ... we are halfway there, we know that things can change quickly in football so we have to be at our best again on ​Tuesday,” winger Hauge told Norway’s TV2.
“They (Sporting) ​are a good team with many good players, but we are also a fantastic team, we have shown that many times now.”