Ronaldo misfires but Portugal prevail in final World Cup warm-up against Nigeria
It took just two minutes for Cristiano Ronaldo to record his first attempt on goal, firing wide from distance.
However, Diogo Costa was the first goalkeeper to make a save, albeit a comfortable one, as Calvin Bassey tried his luck from the edge of the box.
It was not long before Ronaldo squandered another chance, and it was a golden one as he found himself through on goal, only to place his effort wide.
Nigeria also missed the target twice through Akor Adams and Wilfred Ndidi, before Portugal eventually took the lead midway through the first half.
Two Premier League players combined as Diogo Dalot cut back for Pedro Neto, who took a neat touch before finding the bottom corner for his first goal in four months.
The hosts then probed for a second with Bruno Fernandes – who scored a brace in the last head-to-head – seeing his half-volley tipped over by Maduka Okoye after the ball dropped nicely for him following a clearance from a free-kick.
The Manchester United star then whipped in a dangerous corner for his former club teammate Ronaldo, who looped a header just over, missing his third big chance of the match on a night when he received a Flashscore Rating of 6.3.
Okoye also had to be alert to tip over Francisco Trincao’s strike, opening the door for Nigeria to equalise on the counter through Adams, who played a one-two with Fisayo Dele-Bashiru before finishing with his left foot.
The score remained level heading into the second half, with Portugal making nine changes to freshen up the team. One of those to come on was Joao Felix, who almost made an immediate impact when his strike rattled the underside of the crossbar, but while most of the ball crossed the line, not all of it did.
After a quiet period where both teams’ substitutes were settling into the match, the Selecao managed to retake the lead through Conceicao. Joao Cancelo passed to him, but the goal was all about Conceicao’s individual brilliance, as he bamboozled his defender before cutting inside and rifling into the bottom corner from what looked to be an awkward angle.
Portugal have now won nine of their last 10 games on home soil (D1), but Roberto Martínez’s men will have to show their might on away shores at the World Cup, where they kick things off against DR Congo, who eliminated Nigeria from World Cup qualifying.
The Super Eagles instead must reflect on losing their own six-match unbeaten streak (W4, D2), but at least kept it close against one of the world’s highest-ranked nations.