Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Ramos Is The Hero


Ramos promises to get cup tattoo    
If Mijatovic will forever be remembered as the hero of Real's seventh European Cup title and Zidane as the hero of their ninth, Sergio Ramos will go down in history as the man who brought Los Blancos 'la Décima'. His header at the Estadio Da Luz will forever be remembered as one of the happiest moments ever for everyone associated with the club.
A goal down and just seconds away from losing the Champions League final to Atlético, the imposing figure of Sergio Ramos emerged from a mass of Real teammates and opposition players who had jumped for the last ball of the game. Ramos soared higher than anyone and headed home to equalise for Real.
However, his enormous influence on 'la Décima' goes far beyond that unforgettable goal in Lisbon. Ramos was Real's out-and-out leader in defence and one of the players who carried the team throughout this season's tournament.
He hit top form in the tie against Bayern Munich. He imposed his leadership at the Bernabéu to keep Guardiola's men at bay, whilst in Munich his performance was reminiscent of Beckenbauer. He thwarted Bayern, kept a level head, ran hard and scored two goals that sent the reigning European champions packing.
Then it was onto the final in Lisbon, a game that took Sergio Ramos' legendary status to new heights and saw him go down in Real's history books.


    
If Mijatovic will forever be remembered as the hero of Real's seventh European Cup title and Zidane as the hero of their ninth, Sergio Ramos will go down in history as the man who brought Los Blancos 'la Décima'. His header at the Estadio Da Luz will forever be remembered as one of the happiest moments ever for everyone associated with the club.
A goal down and just seconds away from losing the Champions League final to Atlético, the imposing figure of Sergio Ramos emerged from a mass of Real teammates and opposition players who had jumped for the last ball of the game. Ramos soared higher than anyone and headed home to equalise for Real.
However, his enormous influence on 'la Décima' goes far beyond that unforgettable goal in Lisbon. Ramos was Real's out-and-out leader in defence and one of the players who carried the team throughout this season's tournament.
He hit top form in the tie against Bayern Munich. He imposed his leadership at the Bernabéu to keep Guardiola's men at bay, whilst in Munich his performance was reminiscent of Beckenbauer. He thwarted Bayern, kept a level head, ran hard and scored two goals that sent the reigning European champions packing.
Then it was onto the final in Lisbon, a game that took Sergio Ramos' legendary status to new heights and saw him go down in Real's history books.

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