World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
June 23, Houston, Ronaldo scored in the 6th minute and added another in the 39th. A 41 year old netted a brace in the World Cup. From Germany 2006 to the United States 2026, spanning 20 years and six tournaments with goals, he surpassed Eusébio to become Portugal's all time World Cup top scorer.
On June 23, in Houston, Ronaldo scored in the 6th minute and again in the 39th. A 41-year-old scored a brace at the World Cup. He has scored in six tournaments spanning 20 years, from Germany 2006 to the USA 2026, surpassing Eusébio to become Portugal's all-time World Cup top scorer.
After the match, Ronaldo said: "It felt like I'd retired." That line sounded like a retort to everyone who had written his obituary. The post-match interview of a 41-year veteran sounded like the first words of someone who had been sentenced to death and climbed out of the coffin.
But the story that truly stung me that night happened six days earlier in the same city.
On June 17, Portugal vs. DR Congo. João Neves opened the scoring for Portugal in the 6th minute, and everyone expected a rout. In first-half stoppage time, Yoane Wissa smashed a cannonball header into the net. It was DR Congo's first World Cup goal in 52 years.
Wissa nearly went blind from an eye condition in 2021. Five years later, he used that almost-lost eye to track the ball's trajectory and hammer it into Portugal's goal. After the match, he said: "We are here, we are back." One man's physical fate and a nation's football destiny overlapped in that single second.
Portugal had 75% possession but only 7 shots. DR Congo had 8 shots and an expected goals of 0.82. They passed the ball around like prayer beads, spinning in circles and getting nothing. 1-1 was fixed on the NRG Stadium scoreboard, with over sixty thousand seats watching a man who nearly went blind drag Portugal into the mud.
England's opener in Arlington was a completely different story. Expected goals of 2.8 vs. 0.71 wasn't a match, it was a one-sided demolition. Kane equalized from the spot in the 12th minute and scored again in the 42nd, Bellingham added a third in the 47th, and Rashford sealed it in the 85th. 4-2. Croatia equalized twice but ultimately collapsed. Tuchel's team looked like they had already written the script for the group stage.
Six days later, Ghana tore that script up.
England 0-0 Ghana. Tuchel said after the match: "Full respect to Ghana, they defended with a lot of determination, with a lot of discipline, and one of the most physical performances." Then he appealed to England fans: "Don't lose belief."
A manager whose team produced 2.8 expected goals in their first match, then got shut out in the second, telling fans not to lose faith. Only six days apart. This wasn't a form slump; it was a whole team dismantled by a defensive system.
After the match, Bellingham tried to steady the ship: "I'm young, but I'm still one of the experienced players in the dressing room. There's no worries, no stress, no drama at all in there." When a team needs a 22-year-old kid to come out and guarantee "no drama," it means drama is already at the door.
Modrić's story is another thread. On June 23 against Panama, he made his 200th appearance for the national team, fourth in Croatian history. The team won 1-0, Budimir scoring in the 54th minute, and goalkeeper Livaković making three crucial saves to secure the victory.
After the match, Modrić said: "Thank God, we got three extremely important points. The 100th match didn't end so well." A 40-year-old midfielder, on his 200th appearance, still thinking about the regret of his 100th. Panama's loss eliminated them, but Modrić and Croatia aren't dead yet. 3 points, Ghana has 4, and the two teams face each other in the final round. Win and continue; lose and go home.
The situation in Group K is more complicated. Colombia leads with two wins and 6 points, first beating Uzbekistan 3-1, then defeating DR Congo 1-0—Muñoz's goal in the 76th minute sealed the win, with shots from James Rodríguez and Luis Díaz both saved by DR Congo goalkeeper Mpasi.
Portugal is second with 4 points. Ronaldo's two goals against Uzbekistan boosted their goal difference, but the 1-1 draw with DR Congo in the opener exposed old problems. 75% possession for only 7 shots—if they don't fix this habit of passing the ball around like prayer beads, they'll struggle against tough opponents in the knockout stages.
The final round sees Colombia vs. Portugal; neither team has fully qualified yet. The group top spot will determine which half of the knockout bracket they go to and which opponents they face. This isn't a meaningless positioning match; it's serious calculation.
This World Cup has 48 teams in 12 groups, with the top two from each group and the eight best third-placed teams advancing. Third-placed teams can also survive. The format itself gives strong teams a safety net, but it also makes every draw fatal. England leads Group L with 4 points and a goal difference of +2, Ghana is right behind with 4 points and +1, Croatia is still alive on 3 points, and Panama is already eliminated on 0 points. The final round match between Croatia and Ghana is a true battle for survival, while England vs. Panama looks like a formality; but in this format, goal difference could decide whether a third-placed team advances.
After the 60 group stage matches are played, 3,605,357 people have flooded into US stadiums. The total attendance has already broken the World Cup's all-time record, with 44 matches still to play. But no matter how big the numbers are, they are not as important as one specific person. The 41-year-old Ronaldo is still waiting for his next match.