A hush fell over Portugal’s media room on Sunday, on the eve of their Round of 16 clash with Spain, as Cristiano Ronaldo, 41, five-time Ballon d’Or winner and the most decorated goalscorer in the men’s game, confirmed what football had long suspected: his sixth World Cup will be his last.
“It’s about enjoying it as much as possible,” Ronaldo told reporters, his tone more reflective than triumphant. “This will be my last World Cup, but let’s hope tomorrow isn’t my last game.”
It was a typically Ronaldo sentence, equal parts farewell and defiance, a man closing one door while keeping his foot wedged firmly against another. The remarks capped a two-decade international career spanning 23 years, 232 appearances, and 146 goals for Portugal, a body of work with no historical parallel.
Ronaldo was careful to distinguish between ending his World Cup odyssey and ending his international career altogether, a line that has fueled speculation among Portuguese media for months. “The day will come,” he said, before adding, with the kind of blunt sincerity that has become his trademark in later life: “Whatever happens tomorrow, Cristiano will leave with a clear conscience 100%, no, 1,000%. Because I’ve given everything in football.”
He was equally unbothered by the suggestion that his motivations might be running thin. Wealth, he said, was never the point. “I don’t need it; I have a good life, but it’s about passion. I play football because I love it… You have to enjoy every day. And I’ve scored three goals at this World Cup. I’m not doing too badly, right?”
Those three goals, two against Uzbekistan in the group stage and a penalty against Croatia in the Round of 32, were enough to make Ronaldo the first player in history to find the net at six separate World Cups, stretching back to his tournament debut in 2006.
The Croatia strike carried its own quiet symbolism: his first-ever goal in a World Cup knockout match, arriving two decades into a career that had somehow never produced one before.
For a man who has seen and won almost everything the game has to offer, Ronaldo’s assessment of this tournament carried unexpected weight. “It’s been fantastic,” he said. “It goes beyond the pitch. This is the World Cup I’ll remember the most because of people’s passion. It’s even more this time; I don’t know why. It’s been, emotionally, the best. I’ve enjoyed it very much.”
It is a notable admission from a player whose relationship with the World Cup has often been one of near misses and heartbreak rather than fulfillment.
Ronaldo has never lifted the trophy, and by his own reckoning, he never needs to. “I’m not lacking anything in life. I’m not going to be more or less Cristiano because I won the World Cup. We have the qualities to win, but only one country can win it. Age gives you maturity and experience.”
Perhaps the most striking passage of Sunday’s press conference was Ronaldo’s meditation on criticism, a subject that has trailed him since he first broke through at Sporting Lisbon as a teenager. Rather than bitterness, he offered something closer to appreciation. “I’m thankful even for the attacks I receive,” he said. “Turning 40, and I hope to live another 40 years with the criticism; that’s how you grow the most as a person, and I thank you, journalists, for that.”
None of this reflection has dulled the competitive edge that has defined Ronaldo’s career. Portugal face a Spain side unbeaten in 34 matches, chasing a second World Cup title sixteen years after their triumph in South Africa, in what has been billed as one of the standout fixtures of the knockout rounds: a reunion, of sorts, for a player who spent nine seasons in Spain with Real Madrid.
Their last World Cup meeting, in 2018, produced a 3-3 draw remembered chiefly for a Ronaldo hat-trick, a game that feels both distant and strangely close on the eve of Monday’s rematch.
Ronaldo remains contracted to Saudi Pro League club Al-Nassr until 2027, so club football, at least, has not yet reached its final chapter. But the World Cup, the tournament that first introduced the world to a gangly, stepover-happy teenager in 2006 and now bids farewell to a 41-year-old elder statesman, will not get a seventh installment.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Cristiano Ronaldo has confirmed that the 2026 World Cup, his sixth, will be his last, closing out a historic international career of 232 caps and 146 goals for Portugal without ever winning the tournament.
At 41, with three goals already scored and a place in history secured as the only player to net at six World Cups, he says he leaves with no regrets, driven purely by passion rather than a need to prove anything.
The final word, though, is still to be written: Portugal face Spain in the Round of 16, and how far this last World Cup run goes remains up to Ronaldo and his team on the pitch.














