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Portugal survive late drama to beat Croatia and reach World Cup last 16

AI News July 03, 2026 09:09 PM
Portugal survive late drama to beat Croatia and reach World Cup last 16

Portugal survive late drama to beat Croatia and reach World Cup last 16

Ronaldo, 41, becomes the oldest player to score in a World Cup knockout match

Cristiano Ronaldo scored the first World Cup knockout-stage goal of his career, Goncalo Ramos netted a stoppage-time header and Portugal got a last-second break on an offside call to beat Croatia 2-1 on Thursday and set up a last-16 clash with Spain.

Croatia looked to have equalized at the end, leaving Ronaldo crestfallen ‌on the bench, but the last-gasp effort was ruled offside after a video assistant referee review, prompting the team's supporters in the south end of Toronto Stadium to shower the pitch with debris.

"It's difficult because it's a game if you don't win, you go home," said Ramos. "But for me, especially, I love those types of moments, I love those types of games, I want to play every game like that, I want to be in the big moment."

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It was Josko Gvardiol who thought he had equalized for Croatia in the 103rd minute but a review showed the ball ​had touched Igor Matanovic on the way through, which made Gvardiol offside.

"We didn't deserve this sort of finish," said ​Croatia coach Zlatko Dalic. "It's never easy when you concede a goal in the last minutes of the match but we should have resolved this differently."

Ronaldo, 41, became the oldest player to score in the knockout stage of a World Cup when he fired home from the spot to draw Portugal level in the 68th minute of a pulsating game ​before substitute Ramos rose above the Croatia defenders in the fourth minute of stoppage time.

The goal for Ronaldo, who was taken out of the game by coach Roberto Martinez ⁠in the 81st minute, was his first in a ⁠World Cup knockout game.

Ivan Perisic had put Croatia in front when he brought down a pass from Josip Stanisic ‌and coolly fired home at the far post in the 53rd minute as the game opened up considerably with incredible back-and-forth action.

Ronaldo finally got his moment in the 68th minute when he fired a penalty straight down the middle of the goal after Renato Veiga was pulled down in the area by Vlasic.

Portugal took to the pitch with heavy hearts as the match was played a day before the one-year anniversary of the death of their ​forward Diogo Jota in a car crash.

An image of Jota in his No. 21 shirt was shown on video boards at Toronto Stadium after the playing of Portugal's national anthem. Portuguese supporters then gave a standing ovation in honor of Jota in the 21st minute.

After the game an emotional Ronaldo put ⁠on Jota's red No. 21 shirt while fighting back tears.

"We won for us, Diogo and Portugal. Let’s Go," Ronaldo posted on his official Instagram account.

Portugal's Martinez also spoke about Jota. "Several beautiful symbols of power and energy ⁠and what Jota meant for the team," the coach said.

"He was someone who believed, and we have responsibility for Diogo and we are going to keep doing this."

The last Toronto-based game of the global showcase ⁠was a marquee ⁠all-European clash featuring two ageless wonders going head-to-head and it was Ronaldo who kept ​his hopes for an elusive World Cup alive while Luka Modric was left to ponder his international future.

Ronaldo, who shared a moment on the pitch with Modric after the match, said he hopes the man who has featured ​in each of Croatia's last 23 matches at the World Cup ⁠has more football left in him.

"I spoke with him. He's a legend of football," Ronaldo said of Modric. "Played so many years together with him at Real Madrid. I wish him all the best and I hope he continues to play."

Portugal and Croatia have massive diaspora populations in the Greater Toronto Area and thousands of their supporters braved stifling heat as they danced their way to the stadium for the highly anticipated first World Cup meeting between the two nations.

By the time the game kicked off, the temperature had dropped considerably from the day's earlier high of 37 degrees Celsius (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) that convinced officials to cancel a watch party outside Toronto City Hall.

Portugal will face Spain on Monday in Dallas with ⁠the winner moving on to play Belgium or the United States ‌in the quarter-final.