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Portugal look for Figo flourish

June 07, 2004 15:03 IST

Luis Figo is cutting it fine in his quest to land a first major title at full international level for Portugal, but Euro 2004 may yet provide the 31-year-old forward with the crowning moment of his career.

Figo has won just about every honour available to him at club level and was named FIFA World Player of the Year in 2001.

Luis FigoHe has won more than 100 caps and has done more as an ambassador for Portuguese football than any player since the great Eusebio. This will be his last, and best, chance to claim the major title that has always eluded him and his country.

Figo has sent out mixed signals about his plans post-Euro 2004 but the point remains that if Portugal do not win on their own soil in front of their own fans, there is little chance of them winning anything else until the next golden generation comes along.

Born on the industrial south bank of the River Tagus facing Lisbon in 1972, Figo began playing with Sporting, helped Portugal to the World Youth Championship in 1991 and moved to Barcelona in 1995.

After five brilliant years at the Nou Camp, where he matured into arguably Europe's most destructive forward, he moved to Real Madrid in a controversial deal in 2000 for what was then a world record fee of $56 million.

Shortly before the move to Real, he had strengthened his reputation with an inspirational performance in Portugal's run to the semi-finals at Euro 2000.

Figo went on to help Real Madrid to the league title in his first season and the Champions League the following year and also drove Portugal through a great qualifying campaign for the 2002 World Cup.

By the time the squad flew to South Korea, however, he was recovering from injury and lacked his usual speed and strength on the ball.

Portugal paid the price as they were outplayed by the United States and failed to get through the first round.

Figo's spark seemed to be missing for much of last season, too, but this year he has re-emerged as one of the most effective forwards in Spain.

He no longer possesses the stunning change of pace but he retains an exquisite touch and has developed a street-wise determination that contributes countless free kicks to the Real cause.

"Real Madrid need the sort of player I am now," he explained. "Instead of spending 80 minutes doing nothing, and then providing one goal or an assist, I work throughout the game."

That mix of sublime skill and a willingness to get his elbows and knees dirty for the cause won him warm applause on the night of his 100th appearance for Portugal against England in February -- and may yet have the fans cheering even louder in Lisbon next month.


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