Ronaldo rewrites the record book as Portugal dismantle Uzbekistan 5-0
Cristiano Ronaldo becomes the first player to score at six World Cups as Portugal dispatch debutants Uzbekistan 5-0 in Group K.

Cristiano Ronaldo wrote another line into the tournament's longest-running personal ledger on 23 June 2026, scoring twice as Portugal routed debutants Uzbekistan 5-0 in Group K of the FIFA World Cup. The result, confirmed at roughly 19:20 UTC by international wires, was less a contest than a coronation: at 41, Ronaldo becomes the first man to score at six separate World Cups, a record that had stood as a shared ceiling between him, Marta and a handful of others across the men's game until his pair of finishes in the second half pushed it out of reach again.
Portugal's second match of the group stage doubled as a stress test of the squad's depth. Nuno Mendes and Rafael Leão joined Ronaldo on the scoresheet, and Uzbekistan goalkeeper Abduvakhid Nematov turned the ball into his own net under pressure from a Portuguese set-piece — the kind of own goal that rarely surfaces in a result this lopsided but reflects how one-sided the territorial contest had become by the time the margin passed three.
A record built on longevity, not nostalgia
The framing matters. Ronaldo's goals were not ceremonial. They came inside a match Portugal controlled from the opening whistle, with Roberto Martínez's side rotating through phases that mixed direct wing play with the kind of patient build-up that has become the side's default in this tournament cycle. Uzbekistan, ranked outside the top 50 and competing in their first World Cup, defended in two tight banks for as long as their legs allowed, but the gaps widened as the second half wore on. The five-goal margin is the largest Portugal have recorded at a World Cup since their 7-0 win over North Korea in 2010 — a comparison that puts the scale of Tuesday's performance in historical relief without exaggerating what Uzbekistan could reasonably have been expected to contain.
What the milestone actually measures is durability. To score at six World Cups is to have stayed at the relevant end of elite football across two decades — 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022 and now 2026 — without either injury, loss of form or squad selection interrupting the run. The previous men's record was four consecutive tournaments shared by Ronaldo, Pelé, Uwe Seeler and Miroslav Klose. The bar has now moved decisively and, on the evidence of his movement against Uzbekistan, may move again before the tournament concludes.
The debutants, on their own terms
Uzbekistan's tournament has so far offered two very different evenings. Their opening fixture established them as a side capable of absorbing pressure without collapsing — a competence that, for a Central Asian football programme still building its senior international infrastructure, is itself a milestone. Against Portugal, the gap in resources, FIFA ranking points and big-match experience opened up in ways that few results in this tournament have made visible. White-shirts-shorn-of-possession football is rarely instructive beyond the scoreline; the more telling image was Nematov's own goal, a moment in which the weight of a five-goal defeat collapsed onto a single deflection.
What remains genuinely uncertain is how Uzbekistan will read this tournament once the group stage concludes. The structural argument — that a side reaching its first World Cup has already over-performed by being present — is true, but it tends to flatten the difference between losing narrowly to a tournament favourite and losing heavily to one. The relevant question for Tashkent is not whether they belong, but whether this evening sharpens the case for a senior national league and academy pipeline that can produce a squad capable of contesting a tournament like this in 2030.
The rotation that wasn't
Martínez had been expected to rest senior players, with a knockout-round tie already within touching distance. Instead he kept Ronaldo on for the duration, and the choice paid off twice in front of goal. The decision was a small but telling signal of how Portugal's hierarchy is now arranging its priorities: the captain is not a luxury to be conserved, but the central organising figure of a side still calibrating itself against the weight of expectation that travels with a record-holder.
Portugal sit at the top of Group K with maximum points. The mathematics of progression are now unknotted. The interesting questions — whether Martínez rotates against a side they will expect to beat, whether Ronaldo starts or finishes a knockout tie, whether the goals record shifts again — will be settled by the team-sheet and the next ninety minutes, not the next headline.
Stakes and an open question
The structural story is straightforward: a generational footballer keeps scoring at the only tournament that lets him measure himself against the sport's longest memory. There is no counter-narrative of consequence. The plausible alternative read — that the record is partly a function of football's expanded squad sizes, longer seasons and improved sports-medicine extending careers — is fair, but it cuts in every direction and does not diminish the accomplishment.
What the wire services have not yet specified is the exact minute of each goal, the identity of the assist on Ronaldo's second, or the substitution pattern Martínez ultimately settled on. Those details, which will land in the next twenty-four hours through confederation briefings and federation releases, will refine rather than reshape the picture. For now, the line of the headline holds: Ronaldo, still scoring, still extending the longest personal run the men's World Cup has produced.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/StandardKenya
- https://t.me/ajaenBreaking
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
- https://t.me/france24_en