Euro 2020 matchday five: France start in style as Ronaldo breaks scoring record
France underlined their Euro 2020 favourite tags with a 1-0 win over Germany in Munich, while holders Portugal opened their Group F campaign with a 3-0 win against Hungary in Budapest.
The tournament’s so-called ‘group of death’ saw the two former world champions go head-to-head on Tuesday night.
A first-half own goal from Mats Hummels proved enough for a hard-earned France win, with Kylian Mbappe and Karim Benzema both seeing efforts ruled out for offside at the Allianz Arena.
Defending champions Portugal, meanwhile, eventually got the better of Hungary after a late double by Cristiano Ronaldo helped silence the majority of the home fans at a full-capacity Puskas Arena.
A winning start to @EURO2020 for Les Bleus 👊🇫🇷1-0🇩🇪 #FRAGER#FiersdetreBleuspic.twitter.com/706oV8EqTF— French Team ⭐⭐ (@FrenchTeam) June 15, 2021
Daily social
Denmark midfielder Christian Eriksen gave a positive update on his health and thanked everyone for their kind messages of support.
Budapest’s bumper crowd
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter
The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week.
The Puskas Arena in Budapest hosted the biggest attendance of the tournament so far, with a near capacity 61,000 crowd packed in as Hungary – where there has been a huge Covid-19 vaccination rollout – opened their Group F campaign with a defeat to dampen the party atmosphere.
Quote of the day
Eriksen with words everyone wanted to hear.
Allez Les Bleus
Stat attack
Cristiano Ronaldo 🤩— UEFA EURO 2020 (@EURO2020) June 15, 2021
Portugal forward Ronaldo became the first player to appear in five European Championship finals when he led the team out against Hungary – having made his debut against Greece at Euro 2004. Not content with that new benchmark, Ronaldo’s late double then also saw him crowned the tournament’s all-time top scorer with 11 goals.
Up next
June 16
Finland vs Russia (Group B, St Petersburg, 1400)
Turkey v Wales (Group A, Baku, 1700)
Italy vs Switzerland (Group A, Rome, 2000)