Benfica rout Brugge, book spot in Champions League quarterfinals

Benfica's Portuguese forward Goncalo Ramos (R) scores his team's second goal during the UEFA Champions League round of 16 second leg against Club Brugge at the Luz stadium in Lisbon on Tuesday. (AFP)
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Updated 08 March 2023
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Benfica rout Brugge, book spot in Champions League quarterfinals

  • The Portuguese team advanced 7-1 on aggregate following their 2-0 win in the first leg in Belgium

LISBON: Benfica continued their good run with a comfortable 5-1 win over Club Brugge on Tuesday to seal their spot in the quarterfinals of the Champions League for the second straight season.

The Portuguese team advanced 7-1 on aggregate following their 2-0 win in the first leg in Belgium.

Rafa Silva, Joao Mario and David Neres scored a goal each, and Gonçalo Ramos found the net twice for Benfica, who hadn’t made it to the last eight in consecutive seasons in more than five decades. They were eliminated by eventual runners-up Liverpool last year.

Brugge, making their debut in the knockout stage of the Champions League, plunged deeper into crisis under coach Scott Parker. The team have won only twice in 12 matches since the English manager took over in December.

The Belgian champions were one of the surprises of the group stage, finishing second to Porto and ahead of Bayer Leverkusen and Atletico Madrid.

Benfica were another surprise after finishing first in a group that included Paris Saint-Germain and Juventus. They entered the knockout stage in great form, enjoying a 12-game unbeaten run in all competitions with 10 win in those matches. They have lost only once in 42 matches this season and is unbeaten in its 19 homes games.

Benfica were in control from the start at the Stadium of Light, with Silva opened the scoring from inside the area in the 38th minute. Ramos added to the lead with close-range goals in first-half stoppage time and early after halftime. Mario scored the fourth by converting a 71st-minute penalty kick, and David Neres closed the scoring for the hosts from the box in the 77th.

Bjorn Meijer scored Brugge’s lone goal with a neat one-timer into the top corner in the 87th. It was the team’s first goal after four scoreless matches in the Champions League.

Mario became the first player to score in five consecutive appearances in the competition for Benfica since the great Eusébio in a run from 1963-64.

Mario had already found the net with a back-heel touch two minutes into the match but the goal was disallowed for an offside by Ramos in the buildup.

The Portuguese club have not failed to scored in their last 17 European matches, and they have scored two or more goals in 11 of its last 13 games in Europe.

Benfica, twice a European champion in the early 1960s, had last made it to the last eight in consecutive seasons in 1968 and 1969. It last advanced past the quarterfinals in 1990, when it eventually lost the final to AC Milan.


Gauff overcomes Eala, joins Svitolina in Dubai Tennis Championships final 4

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Gauff overcomes Eala, joins Svitolina in Dubai Tennis Championships final 4

  • World No. 4 cruises past the crowd favorite to end the Filipina’s fairytale and book semifinal place
  • Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina, the 2017 and 2018 winner, chasing 3rd crown after beating Lucky Loser Antonia Ruzic

DUBAI: World No. 4 Coco Gauff cruised into the semifinals of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships on Thursday night, comfortably overcoming a passionate partisan crowd and the object of its affection, Filipina sensation Alexandra Eala.

Gauff will now meet Elina Svitolina, the two-time Dubai champion who unceremoniously dumped her out of the Australian Open in straight sets last month.

American superstar and No. 3 seed Gauff had, by her own admission, played pretty poorly in her Round of 16 win over Elise Mertens on Wednesday, hitting 16 double-faults and being forced to save three match-points. Yet while she did not quite bring her A-game to the packed stadium to face Eala, such was the gap in quality that she still saw off her popular Pinoy opponent 6-0, 6-2 inside 68 minutes.

Eala looked tentative from the first game, quickly losing her first service game. Despite Gauff firing off the first of three first-set double-faults, the 20-year-old Filipina was then unable to capitalize, making the wrong decision, finding the net, hitting long. In the third game, she saved a breakpoint but then volleyed wide at deuce to hand advantage to her opponent, who gratefully took the next point to go 3-0.

In an era when sports followers are often accused of being fair-weather fans, the Kabayan crowd was commendable. They have passionately followed Eala’s every step this week and continued to support her against Gauff. Waving posters and signs — including one that read “UAE: United for Alexa Eala” — they cheered every point as if their voices alone could turn the tide.

They could not, of course, and the second set continued in the same vein. Gauff added two more breaks to take her winning run to 10 consecutive games, though Eala did finally get on the scorecard at 4-1.

It came after a prolonged point, punctuated by increasing noise from the crowd, with both players battling and shuttling between baseline and net. Eala, seeing her scoreboard 0 change to 1, raised an arm and sent the crowd wild.

Spurred on by the shouts yet against the run of play, the world No. 47 then broke to go 2-4, but any hope of a miracle from Manila was short-lived as Gauff came back and consolidated.

“I could have served a little better, but I made it in when it mattered,” Gauff said afterwards. “Alex is a tough competitor. Even when I was up, I knew she could come back at any given moment, I’ve seen her do it before.”

Addressing the raucous fans directly, she added: “I know you were mostly supporting Alex, but it is great to be on a crowded court. I’ve played this tournament (for) many years and to see this stadium full means a lot. Sometimes it’s tough when you’re playing against a ‘home crowd’, but I think it’s great for the sport, so keep being enthusiastic and keep rooting for your player.”

Only a year separates the two, yet while Eala won the 2022 US Open Junior title, Gauff won the US Open proper 12 months later. She added a second Grand Slam crown at Roland Garros last year and her record against players her junior now stands at 14-2. Experience counts, and Eala will benefit from her Dubai defeat.

“Obviously, I think the gap between us was pretty prominent,” said Eala, who is expected to rise to world No. 32 in the WTA rankings on Monday.

“That’s not to say that I’m so far out of reach from these players … The score says a lot, but I think I’m not so disappointed. I keep my head up. I feel good about the whole week, and how I’ve been doing. So, the biggest takeaway for me, honestly, is that I’m on the right path.”

Gauff will face Svitolina in Friday’s final four after the Ukrainian came back from a set down to beat surprise package Antonia Ruzic. Svitolina is the last player to win back-to-back titles in Dubai, and her march to a third crown continues after a determined display. It would mark her first title in Dubai since she became a mother and would put the 31-year-old level with Venus Williams, one behind record-holder Justine Henin.

Just hours after Eala’s fairytale ended it looked like another might emerge, this time with Ruzic as protagonist. The diminutive Croatian lost in first-round qualifying last Friday but battled through to the quarterfinals as a Lucky Loser. On Wednesday, her good fortune saw her through against top seed Elena Rybakina, who retired due to illness.

Under the center court lights on Thursday, Ruzic again showed the energy and skillset that beat Emma Raducanu and Anastasia Zakharova in the earlier rounds. The 23-year-old world No. 67 looked determined to seize her opportunity, grabbing a dominant 6-3 first-set victory.

But luck only holds for so long, and Ruzic’s early success seemed to stir her opponent, who awoke and wasted no time in responding to ultimately prevail 3-6, 6-2, 6-3.

“Antonia played unbelievable in the first set,” Svitolina said. “I had to really find the small holes in her game. I was very happy in the way I could bounce back in the second. Then I think I finally found my game in the third.”

The world No.9 will now face Gauff, who she swept aside in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open last month when she beat the American 6-1, 6-2.