Rui Silva time-wasted but says: “Porto had few chances in either game” | OneFootball

Rui Silva time-wasted but says: “Porto had few chances in either game” | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: Portal dos Dragões

Portal dos Dragões

·23. April 2026

Rui Silva time-wasted but says: “Porto had few chances in either game”

Artikelbild:Rui Silva time-wasted but says: “Porto had few chances in either game”

Rui Silva spent the full 90 minutes throwing himself onto the ball, dragging out restarts and inventing knocks, yet he had no qualms, in the end, about stepping up to the microphone to insist that “FC Porto had few clear scoring chances, both in one match and the other.”

An intriguing analysis, coming precisely from the goalkeeper who benefited most from every stoppage, every drawn-out substitution, every second pushed off the clock. If FC Porto created so little, it remains to be explained why the Alvalade side felt such urgency to burn through every second of possession outside Sporting’s box.


OneFootball Videos


In his reading of the tie, the Portugal international sold the usual script: “A game of resilience, of suffering when it was time to suffer, and having the ball and personality. Over the two legs we were superior, we had a lot of quality with and without the ball.” There was suffering, certainly. Superiority on the ball, though, was well hidden beneath the green-and-white shirts in theatrical tumbles at the slightest touch.

The keeper also took the opportunity to complain about Sporting’s schedule: “Against Arsenal, despite being knocked out, we played a great tie against one of the great teams in the world, then we lost the derby to our rival, it was tough, especially at home, we fell further away from our objective, winning the league, and then three days later coming here to contest the second leg of the semi-final is not easy, physically, mentally or emotionally.” A lament that conveniently ignores the reality of a season in which FC Porto also piled up European games, travel and fatigue, without making a banner of it at every microphone.

He left with complaints about his strapped left thigh. “In the thigh, the calf, the ankle. It’s part of it, lots of games in the legs, a lot of wear and tear.” Perhaps the calf was feeling it most of all from the repeated trips to and from the touchline to delay the restart of play.

There was resilience, yes. FC Porto’s, in trying to play football against an opponent determined to turn a semi-final at the Dragão into a manual of anti-football.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.

Impressum des Publishers ansehen