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Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates a goal against Paris Saint-Germain at Parc des Princes, Paris, France, on March 6, 2018.BENOIT TESSIER

Cristiano Ronaldo punished Paris Saint-Germain's slack defending once again, scoring a powerful second-half header as Real Madrid cruised into the Champions League quarter-final with a 2-1 win on Tuesday.

Trailing 3-1 from the first leg, PSG's fragile defence crumbled and its attack offered little threat without the injured Neymar. The biggest bang from this PSG side was from the fireworks constantly let off by a section of fans behind one goal.

Edinson Cavani's close-range goal gave PSG some hope with 20 minutes left. But with midfielder Marco Verratti already sent off, scoring two more to force extra time was beyond a lacklustre PSG side.

Instead, midfielder Casemiro's deflected shot looped past stranded goalkeeper Alphonse Areola in the 80th to make it 5-2 on aggregate. He was gifted the ball after midfielder Adrien Rabiot dealt poorly with Lucas Vazquez's cross.

To compound a miserable night for PSG fans, who so badly want to believe this side can conquer Europe, Verratti showed terrible composure while getting sent off midway through the second half. He got a second yellow card, having protested vehemently with referee Felix Brych after not getting a free kick his way.

Ronaldo had already done his usual damage.

The Champions League's all-time leading scorer was given far too much space and leapt triumphantly to beat Areola with a downward header in the 51st minute. It took his tournament-leading tally to 12, including two in the first leg.

After a slow start this season, Ronaldo is hitting top form at a crucial time for a Madrid side looking to win the competition for the third straight time and 13th over all.

He has scored in nine Champions League games in a row, matching Ruud van Nistelrooy's record.

This was a huge test for a PSG side desperate to prove it belongs among Europe's elite, especially after spectacularly failing last year – becoming the first team eliminated after winning the first leg 4-0. Barcelona won the return 6-1.

This time, there was simply not enough belief shown and too many sloppy mistakes.

In the night's other match, five-time champion Liverpool eased into the last eight, drawing 0-0 at home to two-time winner Porto after winning the away leg 5-0.

The atmosphere was electric at Parc des Princes in Paris, with thick smoke engulfing the stadium a prematch pyrotechnics were set off. PSG's exuberant fans were asked to "stop letting off flares" over the stadium loud speaker just after the interval.

This was all part of a concerted effort to motivate the players. The club's communications department had released a video, urging fans to rally behind the team seemingly as a matter of urgency for the city itself. Neymar also posted a video on Twitter, with the words "Vous allez le Faire" (You will do it).

Banners around the ground encouraged the team and some fans had already taken matters into their own hands. Late into the night before the game, a small group of PSG Ultras let off bangers, chanted "Paris" and banged a drum outside the Real Madrid team hotel.

But all this bluster seemed more like bluff, and did little to intimidate a composed Madrid side.

Madrid had the first shot on target, with centre half Sergio Ramos's crisp half-volley bringing a fine stop from Areola. He saved PSG again in the 37th, kicking away Karim Benzema's shot after the former France striker had sprinted clear of Marquinhos down the left.

Near the end of the first half, PSG tested goalie Keylor Navas twice at last.

Navas first dived into the feet of Cavani and, from PSG's next move, blocked his front post well as Kylian Mbappé hit an angled drive from the right.

Ronaldo headed wide early in the second half – a warning sign.

Moments later he headed home Vazquez's pinpoint cross from the left after a quick break down the left from the impressive Marco Asensio, astutely selected ahead of Gareth Bale by coach Zinedine Zidane.

Madrid could have had further goals, with Asensio and Ronaldo hitting the post.

Canadian para hockey goalie Dominic Larocque says despite being a forward for years, he always dreamed of playing in net. The Afghanistan veteran says the team is aiming for gold at the Pyeongchang Paralympics.

The Canadian Press

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