As
 the clock ran down in those febrile, oddly still moments after Sam 
Vokes’s goal had confirmed what everyone in the Stade Pierre Mauroy 
already knew, the Welsh end lolled and bounced around like a huge, 
seething red-shirted basket of kittens. Wales were 3-1 up against Belgium, on their way to the semi-finals, and two games away from actually winning this tournament.
Really, though, this was too much detail. It was simply a glorious, 
self-contained moment, the kind that never leaves fans who were there, 
the sky in Flanders filled with the crackles and shouts and roars of a 
crowd entirely drunk on the spectacle. On the pitch Belgium’s players 
scurried about looking beaten and flattened and frankly a little 
incredulous.
It had been a gloomy day in Flanders, a great damp plain that even in
 mid-summer retains its embedded gloom. All day Lille had been turned 
red by 150,000 travelling Belgians, who had hopped across the border 
into this lovely ornate town right up in the north eastern armpit of 
France. And yet it is Wales
 who will now travel to Lyon to play Portugal, taking their first 
appearance in a tournament for 58 years right to the final knockings.
If there was a moment of sadness, it came with Aaron Ramsey’s yellow 
card in the second half for a needless handball. Ramsey will now miss 
the semi-final. But he had a wonderful game here on a wild night in 
Lille, in a game that settled around a genuinely stunning moment 10 
minutes into the second half.
Ramsey played his part here too. The introduction of Marouane 
Fellaini after the break had been a tribute to his influence, an extra 
rumbling body to wrest back an area of Welsh strength. It seemed to work
 for 10 minutes. And then, abruptly it didn’t.
“I’ve taken the ball, turned and just hit it,” Hal Robson-Kanu said 
afterwards. Which is certainly one way of putting it, just as Rubens’ 
Descent From The Cross is a nice picture of some people standing around 
and Notre Dame cathedral is a big building by a river. No, Hal. You’re 
not getting away with that.
Has there ever been a better individual moment in Welsh football 
history than Robson-Kanu’s goal here? Perhaps not, given the perfect 
synchronicity between the three players that made it; and beyond that an
 entire flickering showreel of choices made, tiny little shifts, right 
moves, steps forward that brought this vibrant group of players to 
Flanders in the first place.
The move started with Ramsey’s driving run through the Belgian 
midfield to take a lovely floated pass from Gareth Bale on his toe. 
Ramsey killed the ball and turned to cross. What happened next was 
breathtaking. It is a moment that will play forever in the background 
for Robson-Kanu, who paused for the tiniest moment, then produced an 
utterly outrageous Cruyff-style turn, the pirouette so swift, so 
brutally dismissive the comparison seems just.
Three Belgian defenders ran the wrong way, a lovely and indeed very 
funny moment of physical deception. Robson-Kanu shifted his weight and 
buried it. And then off he went, continuing on his way to hurl himself 
into his team-mates on the touchline. Oh, Wales. What have you done 
here?
It was all the more startling given the beginning to this game. The 
Welsh fans had produced the usual class-leading anthem before kick-off, 
prickling neck hairs all around the stadium. But it was Belgium
 who began at a rush, Kevin De Bruyne and Eden Hazard linking with 
precision. With eight minutes gone they somehow contrived not to score, 
three successive close-range shots blocked by a flailing wall of red 
shirts.
|  | ||
| Hal Robson-Kanu … scores! | 
|  | 
Finally Wales found a glimpse of space, Bale turning and running at 
goal from halfway, one against six, looking for a moment like peak-era 
Jonah Lomu carrying an under-the-cosh schools team forward against the 
Aussies.
Still Belgium moved the ball between them with an ominous slickness. 
How long could Wales hold out? Twelve minutes was the answer. Radja 
Nainggolan’s opening goal was also a stunner. Hazard laid a pass back 
and Nainggolan struck the ball first time with such sweet-spot precision
 replays showed just a lovely little mist escaping beneath the ball as 
he cut across it, both feet off the ground, sending it fizzing into 
somewhere close to the top corner. Replays might incriminate Wayne 
Hennessey but in real time it was a shot of unsaveable power.
From there Ramsey drove Wales back into the game. In the first half 
alone he created five chances, playing with a waspish, needling energy 
that troubled the Belgium midfield and drew the full backs out into 
uncomfortable areas. In between he tracked Hazard and fought and 
grappled to get a handle on the Mad-Max-Euro-playmaker stylings of 
Nainggolan.
It has been a wonderful tournament for Ramsey, a player who looked a 
little drained in a varying role between defence and attack at Arsenal 
last season. Perhaps the difference at this tournament is simply 
confidence. It has been an occasionally awkward few years at Arsenal. 
With Wales he looks liberated, darling of the crowd, entirely sure of 
his role, legs constantly whizzing, a sniping, scurrying menace.
Against the head the equaliser arrived, Ramsey’s corner headed in 
with bullocking power by Ashley Williams. After half-time there were 
Robson-Kanu’s unforgettable contribution and a fine header from Vokes to
 complete the victory with four minutes remaining. And at the end here 
as the players danced on the pitch, children coming out again to take 
penalties in front of the Welsh fans, the whole occasion had the feeling
 of a vast, entirely glorious family wedding.
With the stadium empty on three sides the Welsh players, families and
 coaching staff were still sitting on the turf, hugging, laughing, 
giving each other piggy backs and savouring every last tang of the 
moment. It was, in a cynical old game, a magical but also utterly normal
 moment of joy, the kind of thing this sport is basically for. Ramsey, 
the lion of Lille, will be missing on Wednesday. It is a blow. But then 
nothing this Wales team does from here should surprise anyone.
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| Frustration for Marouane Fellaini and Romelu Lukaku during their defeat to Wales. | 
 
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