Home News Did Ronaldo just break the knockout record he never owned?

Did Ronaldo just break the knockout record he never owned?

0
Ronaldo taking a penalty.
Source: mrogowski_photography/Depositphotos
Ronaldo in action

Cristiano Ronaldo sets record

Cristiano Ronaldo scored from the penalty spot in the 68th minute as Portugal beat Croatia 2-1 at Toronto Stadium on July 2, 2026, during the World Cup round of 32.

Ronaldo became the oldest World Cup knockout-stage scorer at 41. Portugal then moved from the round of 32 into a round of 16 match against Spain in Dallas.

Ivan Perišić, wearing the Croatia national team's checkered jersey with his name and number 4 on the back

Portugal answers Croatia opener

Ivan Perisic gave Croatia the lead in the 53rd minute after a stronger start to the second half. Portugal trailed by one before Ronaldo’s penalty changed the scoreline in Toronto.

Croatia also created chances after halftime, including a Mateo Kovacic effort that forced Diogo Costa into a stop. That pressure made Portugal’s response depend on cleaner delivery and sharper attacking decisions.

Close-up of Cristiano Ronaldo

Ronaldo ends long wait

Ronaldo’s penalty became his first official World Cup knockout goal after several earlier elimination matches without one. The goal finally closed a rare gap in his long international tournament record.

His previous World Cup knockout appearances included no official goals before the Croatia match in Toronto. The 68th-minute penalty gave Portugal’s captain a verified scoring mark in the decisive stage.

Cristiano Ronaldo wearing a red Portugal national team jersey

Offside denies earlier finish

Ronaldo thought he had scored before the penalty, but officials ruled the finish offside. That decision kept Croatia ahead and left Portugal searching for a legal equalizer in the second half.

The disallowed effort mattered because Portugal still needed another clean scoring chance against Dominik Livakovic. Ronaldo later used the penalty to level the match in Toronto.

Nikola Vlasic during a match

Penalty follows VAR review

Portugal received the penalty after a VAR review of contact involving Nikola Vlasic and Renato Veiga inside the area. The decision gave Ronaldo a direct chance to equalize in Toronto.

Ronaldo converted in the 68th minute and made the score 1-1. The penalty shifted the knockout match from Croatia’s control into a level contest before stoppage time arrived.

Roberto Martinez during a game

Martinez removes Ronaldo

Roberto Martinez substituted Ronaldo late in regulation time, after Portugal had already equalized from the penalty spot. The change altered Portugal’s setup before stoppage time.

Ronaldo left with 1 goal, and Gonçalo Ramos later headed Portugal’s winner from Rafael Leão’s cross in stoppage time.

Goncalo Ramos during a game

Goncalo Ramos wins it

Gonçalo Ramos scored Portugal’s winner in the fourth minute of stoppage time after Rafael Leão supplied the ball from the left side. His header sent Portugal into the next round.

The goal gave Portugal a 2-1 lead after Ronaldo had already left the field. Ramos turned a level match into a late escape for Roberto Martinez’s side in Toronto.

Croatian professional footballer Joško Gvardiol

Late review protects lead

Joško Gvardiol appeared to equalize for Croatia deep in stoppage time, but officials reviewed the buildup and removed the goal after a touch involving Igor Matanović.

That touch changed the offside decision and kept Portugal ahead. Croatia lost its apparent late equalizer, and Portugal held on to the 2-1 lead.

BMO Field in Toronto, which is currently branded for the 2026 FIFA World Cup

Toronto Stadium hosts finish

Toronto Stadium hosted the round of 32 match between Portugal and Croatia on July 2, 2026. The venue name matters because World Cup match listings used that official event label.

The match ended with Portugal scoring twice after halftime, and Croatia left the game defeated after a late review at Toronto Stadium.

Ronaldo taking a penalty.

First half stays scoreless

Portugal controlled long stretches of the first half but did not turn possession into a goal before the break. Ronaldo missed contact on Pedro Neto’s cross, and Croatia reached halftime level in Toronto.

The scoreless first half set up a sharper second period with 3 goals and 1 late reversal. Perišić, Ronaldo, Ramos, and VAR all shaped the result after halftime.

Spain national team

Spain awaits in Dallas

Portugal advanced to face Spain in the round of 16 in Dallas on July 6. The winner of that match would move into the World Cup quarterfinals with a victory.

The Spain matchup followed Portugal’s comeback against Croatia, not the group stage. Portugal reached Dallas through Ronaldo’s equalizer, Ramos’s stoppage-time header, and the late offside review in Toronto that night.

Professional footballer Cristiano Ronaldo playing for Portugal

Ronaldo keeps chase alive

Ronaldo’s penalty extended Portugal’s tournament run and kept his World Cup title pursuit alive after the Croatia match. The trophy remains absent from his international record after several World Cup appearances.

His first World Cup knockout goal gave Portugal’s captain another tournament milestone in 2026. The record added weight to a late-career run built around 1 remaining major prize.

As Donald Trump keeps pushing another White House UFC event despite Dana White’s firm stance, dive into why the clash between political spectacle and fight promotion is stirring fresh attention.

Team Portugal before a game

Portugal advances from Toronto

Portugal left Toronto Stadium with a comeback win, 2 second-half goals, and a World Cup knockout-stage record for Ronaldo. The result ended Croatia’s 2026 tournament run in the round of 32.

The final score reflected 3 decisive moments in Toronto. Ronaldo tied the match with a 68th-minute penalty, Ramos added the winner, and VAR removed Croatia’s late equalizer after review.

As Donald Trump’s World Cup trophy role keeps fans arguing over tradition and image, explore why his place in the ceremony is drawing fresh debate across soccer circles.

Did Ronaldo’s record penalty or Ramos’s late header matter more for Portugal’s comeback against Croatia? Like the post and share your thoughts in the comments below!

This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.

Read More From This Brand: