Portal dos Dragões
·9 March 2026
Rodolfo Reis: FC Porto made Benfica look ordinary but let it slip

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Yahoo sportsPortal dos Dragões
·9 March 2026

There are phrases that keep echoing because they touch on what’s essential. Rodolfo Reis went straight to the point: “in the second half, FC Porto wanted to give Benfica 3, 4, 5 and let the game get away.” The image is powerful and explains almost everything. When a team comes in so dominant, so confident, so capable of imposing its football, what’s needed is composure. And that’s precisely where the game changed.
In the former captain’s view, the first half saw an FC Porto “dominating at their leisure,” “winning 2-0,” and “with the possibility of even increasing the score.” More than just an advantage on the scoreboard, the idea conveyed is one of clear superiority. A Porto that was organized, intense, lucid, and able to “make Benfica look ordinary.” And when that happens on that stage, against that rival, it’s not a minor detail: it’s a sign of competitive personality and identity.
Then came the loss of control. Rodolfo Reis emphasized that the team “stopped being the highly organized team from the first half and became a team that let the game get away.” And here lies the heart of the discussion. A team can make mistakes, can drop back, can suffer from fatigue, but to let the game fall apart when everything is in their hands? That’s the point that leaves a bitter taste. Because it’s one thing for the opponent to grow on their own merit; it’s another to open the door for them with less firm management of the tempo and spaces.
There was also mention of the substitutions and the impact of the yellow cards. Rodolfo Reis was clear: “the coach, for the players who have a yellow card, to substitute them, I agree.” The analysis makes sense from a preventive standpoint. In big games, a second yellow changes everything in an instant. But then comes the other half of the issue: “the performance of the players who come in doesn’t match those who went out.” And that observation deserves attention. It’s not enough to make changes; the team must maintain structure, aggression with the ball, and discipline without it.
There was also the explanation of “physical management,” brought into the debate. It can be a valid argument, but does it address the essential? Rodolfo Reis accepts that context, though he leaves his doubt hanging: “he has to say something, everyone has to say something, and we’re left with what we think.” And what he thinks is simple: the substitutions happened mainly because of the yellow cards. A legitimate reading, especially when disciplinary risk can influence decisions in more high-pressure environments. But even accepting that logic, why did FC Porto lose the emotional and tactical control they had shown before?
The most relevant point, however, is this: FC Porto showed they have what it takes to be superior. They showed it clearly for long stretches. If the second half brings lessons, the first half brings certainties. And at the Dragão, as always, that’s how the future is measured: by the demand to correct what failed without forgetting the strength of what they were already able to impose. Because this club doesn’t live on excuses; it lives on the ambition to control the game and to honor its shirt.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.
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