Portugal don't NEED to drop Cristiano Ronaldo - but Roberto Martinez must learn when to axe his superstar or risk more World Cup disappointment

Portugal don't NEED to drop Cristiano Ronaldo - but Roberto Martinez must learn when to axe his superstar or risk more World Cup disappointment

Published Jun. 22, 2026 10:00 a.m. ET
GOAL

Another major tournament, another debate raging around Portugal's continued selection of Cristiano Ronaldo. The veteran forward's anonymous performance in his country's World Cup opener against DR Congo has reignited the now-biennial discussion over whether or not he should still be starting for the Seleccao at the grand old age of 41. Although you shouldn't expect anything to actually change so long as Roberto Martinez is in charge, the manager must learn when to take action.

While the rest of world football's superstars dominated the opening round of World Cup games, Ronaldo's display on matchday one caught the eye and stole the headlines for all the wrong reasons, as he failed to land a single shot on target.

Isolated up front, Portugal's record goal-scorer barely had a sniff against the unfancied African nation as Martinez's men were held to a dismal draw that belied their status as one of the pre-tournament favourites, and the decision to keep him on the pitch for the full 90 minutes

Almost five years to the day since Ronaldo's last tournament goal from open play

Miserable start

While the tournament's other biggest names, such as Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Harry Kane, all made a big impact in the first round of fixtures at the World Cup, scoring at least two goals each, it was telling that Ronaldo had a day to forget.

Inexplicably left on the pitch for the full 90 minutes against DR Congo by Martinez, the 41-year-old mustered just three shots all game long, and none of them were on target. Two of those were half-chances, but he could only skew the ball wide on both occasions from tricky pull-backs.

Ultimately, that would prove very costly;

'Makes no sense'

Speaking after the game,

"It makes no sense to get the best goal-scorer in world football out in a game that you need goals," he said, before insisting there was no need to panic just yet. "The World Cup is a tournament where these things happen. Argentina lost to Saudi Arabia [in 2022] and then went on to win the World Cup. In 2010, Spain lost to Switzerland and then won the World Cup. Those weren't performances that looked like those of eventual champions, but that's part of the process.

"Today, after we scored the opening goal, those emotions had a negative effect on our performance. We stopped taking risks, we stopped looking for space, we stopped reaching the final third. That was more a matter of emotion than of tactics or technique. It happens. It's part of the World Cup. Now we evaluate it and improve for the second match."

Tournament drought

Martinez can act like this was an isolated incident all he wants, but the truth is that this is a recurring theme for Portugal, and

Granted, Ronaldo scored his fair share of goals in qualifying (five in as many appearances) and was instrumental in his country's UEFA Nations League triumph last year, but he has now drawn a blank in

It's all good and well plundering goals in Saudi Arabia and against the likes of Armenia and Hungary when the pressure is relatively off, but it has been a long, long time since Ronaldo made an impact on the very biggest stage.

Ideal sidekick?

If there is one defence of Martinez's stubborn backing of Ronaldo, it is that Portugal are not currently blessed with a plethora of centre-forward options who have delivered consistently for their country, reflected in that fact that there is only one other out-and-out striker in the squad.

However, while a change to the starting XI is unlikely to be forthcoming,

After all, if Martinez has no issue with the fact 41-year-old Ronaldo plies his trade in the relatively-weaker Pro League, he should also have no problem handing an opportunity to the more youthful Felix as Portugal desperately search for inspiration. It's therefore

Ramos to the rescue?

Then there's that other out-and-out striker we were talking about. Goncalo Ramos was left on the bench until the 83rd minute in Portugal's opener in Houston as Martinez turned to wingers Francisco Conceicao and Rafael Leao before bringing him on, with Ronaldo remaining on the pitch even after the Paris Saint-Germain man was introduced.

There was a time when Ramos looked like the natural successor to Ronaldo, most notably when former manager Fernando Santos dramatically started him ahead of the legendary attacker in a last-16 clash with Switzerland at the 2022 World Cup during his prolific season with Benfica. Ramos famously seized the opportunity by plundering a hat-trick and laying on another in a 6-1 rout.

However, since Santos was replaced by Martinez in the aftermath of Portugal's disappointing quarter-final exit in Qatar, Ramos has had to be incredibly patient for opportunities, with the new head coach instantly reverting back to leaning on the iconic veteran and repeatedly defending that dependence.

Partly as a result of that, the PSG striker's career probably hasn't followed the expected trajectory at both club and international level in subsequent seasons; Ramos has only netted six goals for Portugal since the 2022 tournament, while he has rarely been a starter since joining the French giants in 2023.

Know when to act

You can't, then, necessarily fault Martinez for continuing to play Ronaldo from the start; he might be the wrong side of 40 and plying his trade in the Saudi Pro League, but a 30-goal season for Al-Nassr is arguably enough to suggest that he can make something happen, and he is, of course, revered for the way he has looked after his body.

But from Martinez's perspective, this is all about knowing when to act - even if it means displeasing his revered captain.

While he might still have a big moment in him (even if it's from the penalty spot), the manager needs to recognise that there is no longer much point in having Ronaldo on the pitch for 90 minutes, and those are the situations that the likes of Felix and Ramos are there for as potential match-winners off the bench.

If Ronaldo is unable to end his tournament goal drought against World Cup debutants Uzbekistan, the noise surrounding this distraction is only going to grow louder.

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