Dublin-born defender’s display against Spain drew comparisons with Paul McGrath’s against Italy in 1994 but he says there is still room to improve
Rucksack on his back, Roberto “Pico” Lopes was standing on the corner of the narrow walkway way below the stands at the Atlanta stadium on Monday afternoon when the last of Spain’s players tried to make their way home.
More than an hour after the final whistle had gone and they still couldn’t get past him, someone quipped.
The centre-back from Crumlin reckoned he was “rusty” too here, yet he was at the heart of the greatest moment in Cape Verde’s history, one his coach claimed went far beyond football, and the kind of story only the World Cup can write.
It had taken a little while and a word or two to realise it.
In the final minute when Spain had their 11th and last corner, Lopes had looked at the clock and seen that it was close.
He had heard the final whistle go, heard the roar as it was confirmed that Cape Verde had held on, undefeated on their tournament debut.
He had seen the tears and celebration, family and friends in the stands, As he went down the tunnel he encountered Ray Houghton, scorer of the goal in New York when the Republic of Ireland defeated Italy 32 years ago, and embraced him.
It was, he said, “lovely”, but what all this meant hadn’t entirely sunk in yet.
Continue reading...Sources: The Guardian






