World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
On June 17, 2026, in the first match of Group K of the World Cup, as soon as the referee's whistle blew, 41 year old and 132 day old Cristiano Ronaldo had already pocketed the title of the oldest non goalkeeper starter in World Cup history. The record was secured within the first second of the game, but the remaining 89 minutes and 59 seconds were all embarrassment. The six time World Cup veteran couldn't break free from the muscular jungle of the Democratic Republic of Congo's defenders. With a 1 1 draw, he had two attempts near the edge of the six yard box—one header went wide, and one shot was botched. The pre arranged "tribute to the legend" press releases all turned into waste paper.
On June 17, 2026, in the opening match of Group K at the World Cup, the referee's whistle had barely sounded when Cristiano Ronaldo, aged 41 years and 132 days, pocketed the title of the oldest non-goalkeeper starter in World Cup history. The record was set one second into the match, but the remaining 89 minutes and 59 seconds were sheer embarrassment. The six-time World Cup veteran couldn't carve out space in the muscular jungle of Congo DR's defenders. With a 1-1 scoreline, he had two attempts near the six-yard box—one header went wide, and one shot was mishit. All the pre-arranged "tribute to a legend" scripts turned into wastepaper.
His decline was painfully obvious, so why was he still starting? The answer wasn't on the tactics board but in Roberto Martínez's expiring contract. The Portugal coach's contract ends after this World Cup, and local media had already leaked that Ronaldo "convinced" Martínez before the match. This wasn't a tactical calculation; it was a blatant exchange of favors. A coach under pressure to renew his contract needed to feed minutes to a superstar reliant on stats to maintain his historical status—each got what they wanted. Martínez surrendered the bottom line of lineup decisions in exchange for a few months of peace in the locker room.
This debt of gratitude had to be repaid on the pitch. A 41-year-old body couldn't withstand the Congo defenders' relentless pressure. Those two missed chances weren't down to bad luck; they were pure technical errors. His jump wasn't high enough; he could only barely graze the ball in aerial duels. At the moment of shooting, his standing leg gave way, turning a shot destined for the corner into a soft push. After turning 39, every day older added a fraction of a second to his reaction time—just enough for Congo defenders to get a foot in. Opponents shattered Portugal's attacks with tireless running and collisions, leaving Ronaldo unable to find space in the box. Every time he held up the ball with his back to goal, it felt like tug-of-war in a swamp.
Also at his sixth World Cup, Messi had just bagged a hat trick against Algeria, tearing away the last fig leaf of the "two superstars" narrative. Ronaldo's march toward Klose's record of 25 World Cup appearances couldn't bridge the gap to Roger Milla's record as the oldest goalscorer at 42 years and 39 days. He couldn't surpass the team's oldest goalscorer record set by Pepe at 39 years and 283 days, and he was less than 300 days away from Milla's mark. His time was running out, just like Martínez's contract—both on a countdown.