Ronaldo bids farewell to FIFA World Cup: 'I leave with a clear conscience'

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Ronaldo bids farewell to FIFA World Cup: 'I leave with a clear conscience'

Synopsis

Cristiano Ronaldo has played his last World Cup — and he knows it. After Portugal's Round of 16 exit to Spain in Dallas, the 41-year-old signed off on a tournament career spanning six editions, 27 appearances, and 11 goals, yet no winner's medal. The record books remember him; the trophy cabinet has a gap that will never be filled.

Key Takeaways

Cristiano Ronaldo confirmed his FIFA World Cup career is over after Portugal's Round of 16 loss to Spain at Dallas Stadium on 7 July .
Ronaldo ends with 27 World Cup appearances — second only to Lionel Messi's 30 — and 11 goals across six editions.
He became the first player to score in six different World Cup editions , a record that stands alone.
At the 2026 edition , Ronaldo scored three goals , including his first-ever World Cup knockout-stage goal against Croatia .
Ronaldo's international honours include UEFA Euro 2016 and two UEFA Nations League titles, but the World Cup remained elusive throughout his career.

Cristiano Ronaldo confirmed on 7 July that his FIFA World Cup journey is over, ruling out a seventh appearance at the global finals after Portugal's Round of 16 exit at the hands of Spain at Dallas Stadium in Arlington. The 41-year-old's departure closes one of international football's most storied World Cup careers — remarkable in its records, yet defined by the one trophy that always stayed out of reach.

A Career in Numbers

Ronaldo ends his World Cup story with 27 appearances — the second most in tournament history, behind only Argentina's Lionel Messi who played 30 — and 11 goals across those matches. He became the first player in history to score in six different World Cup editions, a milestone that stands alone in the record books.

At the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Ronaldo contributed three goals: a brace in Portugal's commanding 5-0 opening victory over Uzbekistan, and a penalty against Croatia in the last 32 — his first-ever World Cup knockout-stage goal — that propelled Portugal into the Round of 16.

What Ronaldo Said After the Final Whistle

'I'm fine, sad to leave the World Cup this way. But, as I said yesterday in the press conference, I gave my best and I leave with a clear conscience,' Ronaldo said after the defeat. He added: 'That's the life of a football player. Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose and we need to keep going. The truth is that it was my last World Cup, and now I will have time with my family so as not to make decisions in the heat of the moment.'

In a fuller reflection, Ronaldo pointed to his broader legacy with the national side: 'I won three titles for Portugal — one European Championship and two UEFA Nations Leagues. Before Cristiano, Portugal had never won any titles. Therefore, I leave with a clear conscience. I gave my best. Tomorrow will be a new day, and life goes on.'

From Germany 2006 to Dallas 2026

Ronaldo's World Cup odyssey began at Germany 2006, where a teenage prodigy scored his maiden tournament goal against Iran and helped Portugal reach a semi-final for the first time in 40 years — a run that would prove to be the deepest he ever went in the competition. He went on to score in each subsequent edition: South Africa 2010, Brazil 2014, Russia 2018, and Qatar 2022.

The World Cup, however, remained the conspicuous gap in a collection that includes a UEFA Euro 2016 title and two UEFA Nations League crowns with Portugal, along with five Ballon d'Or awards and multiple Champions League medals at club level.

What Comes Next

Ronaldo indicated he would take time away from decision-making before determining his next steps, saying he did not want to act 'in the heat of the moment.' At 41, his international retirement is widely expected, though he stopped short of an explicit announcement on that front. The football world now awaits clarity on whether his club career at Al Nassr continues beyond the current season.

Point of View

Its first six-edition scorer, and yet a man who never lifted the one trophy that eluded him. Portugal's Round of 16 ceiling in 2026 also raises a harder question: whether the team was built around Ronaldo's longevity at the cost of a more balanced squad structure. The decision to take him to a seventh decade of football, at 41, was a bet on legacy — and it ended, as it always did, just short of the final.
NationPress
7 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Has Cristiano Ronaldo officially retired from the World Cup?
Yes. Ronaldo confirmed after Portugal's Round of 16 elimination by Spain on 7 July that the 2026 FIFA World Cup was his last, ruling out a seventh appearance at the global finals.
What are Cristiano Ronaldo's FIFA World Cup career statistics?
Ronaldo played 27 World Cup matches — the second most in history after Lionel Messi's 30 — and scored 11 goals across six editions from Germany 2006 to the 2026 tournament. He is the only player to have scored in six different World Cup editions.
Why did Portugal exit the 2026 FIFA World Cup?
Portugal were eliminated in the Round of 16 by Spain at Dallas Stadium. Ronaldo scored three goals in the tournament before the exit, including a penalty winner against Croatia in the last 32.
What titles did Ronaldo win with Portugal?
Ronaldo won three trophies with Portugal: the UEFA European Championship in 2016 and two UEFA Nations League titles. The FIFA World Cup, however, remained the one major honour he never claimed.
What is Ronaldo's deepest run in the FIFA World Cup?
Ronaldo's best World Cup finish was a semi-final at Germany 2006, his debut tournament, where Portugal reached the last four for the first time in 40 years. He never progressed beyond the quarter-finals in any subsequent edition.
Nation Press
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