Portugal ready for Colombia clash after months of planning, Martinez says
Portugal's Spanish coach Roberto Martinez celebrates with players after the 2026 World Cup qualifiers Europe zone group F football match between Portugal and Armenia, at Dragao stadium in Porto on November 16, 2025. Portugal won 9-1.
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Portugal coach Roberto Martinez dismissed concerns
about his team's preparations for Saturday's World Cup group finale against
Colombia, insisting months of planning had left them "perfectly
ready" despite Florida storms disrupting the buildup.
Martinez said his side had benefited from having
started their groundwork back in March for the game at Miami Stadium.
"We started preparing for the match against
Colombia back in March... We've already
had 13 training sessions here in Miami to adapt to the weather," Martinez
told reporters.
"The plan was to
stay in Miami (Florida) to prepare for the match against Colombia.
"The players are ready for the
physical challenge of playing in a different stadium and on a different pitch
that is a different turf from what we have in
Europe. That's what we did, we've prepared since the first day we arrived in the
U.S."
Martinez acknowledged Portugal would face their
first match "away from home" due to the large Colombian fanbase
expected in Miami, where tickets for the highly anticipated clash reportedly
sold for thousands of dollars.
"It means I had to buy tickets for my family in
November,"
Martinez quipped when asked about the fan dedication. "That's what it
means, because I knew it was going to be
difficult to get tickets."
"I hope that tomorrow football wins and the
inspiration of anyone that watches the game wins."
While Colombia have reached
the knockout
stages with six points from two games, Portugal sit second on four points and
are all but through.
Finishing second could give them a tougher path in
the knockout stage, with England or Croatia potential opponents.
But Martinez, who was in good spirits and even had a
laugh when Dua Lipa songs played through the speakers and interrupted
his press conference, said he never concerned
himself with
tournament pathways.
"No, it doesn't (matter). If this were my first
World Cup, I would have said 'yes' because you're inexperienced and you try to
plan the journey, for every possible scenario,
but you realise that isn't realistic," he said.
"I believe the focus should be to
win every game, forget about the next opponent and
respect the opponent. If you want to win the World Cup, you have to beat
everybody.
"You must accept the complexity and the focus
should be on playing our best."
Martinez warned that Nestor Lorenzo's Colombia would
pose a
different tactical challenge.
"They have players like (captain) James
Rodriguez, Luis Suarez and Luis Diaz... They
transition well and they are very fast," he said.
"They work as a team, they have tactical
clarity. There is quality in the players and they
love being part of the national team."

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