LISBON (Agencies): Cristiano Ronaldo’s thigh injury picked up during Portugal’s 1-1 Euro 2020 qualifier draw with Serbia has sparked alarm in Italy ahead of Juventus’s Champions League quarter-final tie against Ajax in two weeks’ time.
The 34-year-old Juve attacker hobbled off 30 minutes into Monday’s stalemate after pulling up chasing a ball on the left wing, and Turin-based daily Tuttosport launched a “Ronaldo Alarm” on Tuesday, while Gazzetta Dello Sport headlined with “CR7 Worry”. Juventus travel to Amsterdam for the first leg of their quarter-final clash with the Dutch side on April 10 with the return leg on April 16, and the absence of Ronaldo would be a huge blow for the Turin giants after he dragged them past Atletico Madrid in the last 16 with a return-leg hat-trick earlier this month.
Recovery time for a thigh injury varies from up to 10 days for a slight problem to three months, but Ronaldo quickly moved to reassure everyone that he would soon shake off the knock. “I’m not worried. I know my body. I believe that in no more than two weeks I’ll be fine,” Ronaldo told reporters. “We have to wait 24 to 48 hours”. The Portuguese star is set to undergo tests on Wednesday or Thursday, either in Lisbon or at Juve’s medical centre in Turin. – Resilient Ronaldo – Ronaldo was rested two weeks ago when the Italian champions suffered their first league defeat this season, 2-0 against Genoa in their last game before the international break.
FP Report WASHINGTON DC: The Department of the Treasury is taking action to further degrade…
FP Report WASHINGTON DC: The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control…
ANKARA (Reuters): Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan waded into the debate over US college campus protests…
Monitoring Desk LONDON: The US State Department has defended talking to the Taliban in order…
KABUL (Reuters) : The Taliban has agreed with Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to build a logistics…
CAIRO (Reuters) : A delegation from Hamas is set to visit Egypt soon for further…
This website uses cookies.