Real Madrid survive Schalke scare
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
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Real Madrid CF 3-4 FC Schalke 04 (agg: 5-4)
Cristiano Ronaldo's record-breaking 77th and 78th goals in Europe were overshadowed by a valiant – if futile – victory.
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• Real Madrid hold off valiant Schalke comeback to reach a fifth straight quarter-final
• Cristiano Ronaldo scores his record-breaking 77th and 78th goals in UEFA club competition
• Christian Fuchs (20) and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar (40) put Schalke in front twice
• Karim Benzema (53) makes it 3-2; Leory Sané (57) and Huntelaar (84) set up tense finale
• Quarter-final draw in Nyon on 20 March at 12.00CET
Real Madrid CF edged into the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals for the fifth year in a row despite a valiant display from FC Schalke 04, who earned a famous second-leg victory but still narrowly bowed out of the competition.
Schalke were the better side in an open first half and twice led, through Christian Fuchs and ex-Madrid forward Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, yet Madrid were level at the break, thanks mainly to Cristiano Ronaldo. The Portuguese twice headed into the Schalke net, taking his tally in UEFA club competition to 78, surpassing the record of former Madrid ace Raúl González, and when Karim Benzema struck eight minutes into the second half, Madrid were in front. Schalke levelled through 19-year-old Leroy Sané and Huntelaar's second of the night set up a tense finale, which Madrid survived – just.
With no team having ever overturned a two-goal home defeat in the UEFA Champions League era, Schalke – 2-0 losers in Gelsenkirchen – might have begun with little hope but they showed plenty of spirit, pressing and harrying at every turn. Ten minutes in, Max Meyer broke down the left and pulled the ball back to Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting whose first-time effort drifted wide.
Meyer then broke through the Madrid defence only to pull a weak shot wide, but still Madrid failed to heed the warnings and, in the 20th minute, they were punished. Tranquillo Barnetta's low cross from the right was allowed to reach Fuchs in space at the far post, and his fierce left-foot strike was too powerful for Iker Casillas.
Madrid roused themselves and five minutes later they were level, Toni Kroos crossing for Ronaldo to nod past Timon Wellenreuther – just as he had in the first leg – and equal Raúl's European mark. Schalke, however, were undaunted and Huntelaar's thunderous attempt from the edge of the area came back off the crossbar. Seconds later, the Dutchman was there again after Casillas parried Meyer's shot; Huntelaar pounced and this time Schalke were back in the lead.
Again Madrid's reply was swift and incisive, Fábio Coentrão's deep centre being headed in by Ronaldo on the stroke of half-time, before the holders gained breathing space early in the second period. Benzema kept his head to evade two defenders and then goalkeeper Wellenreuther to slot his sixth UEFA Champions League goal of the campaign.
Now it was Schalke's turn to muster a response, and they did so in considerable style. Substitute Sané, making his competition debut, found the room to arc a fine effort across Casillas and inside the far post.
Chances continued at both ends, had inadvertently caught out the Madrid defence and thumped a shot past Casillas off the underside of the crossbar.
The keeper then sprang to his right to push away another Sané attempt, yet still Schalke were not beaten. It took a Casillas block from Benedikt Höwedes in added time to finally end their challenge, as Madrid scraped through.