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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Ronaldo at 41 is oldest WC starter

2 min read
10:33UTC

Cristiano Ronaldo, 41, started Portugal's 1-1 draw with DR Congo to become the oldest outfield player ever to begin a World Cup match, managing no goals from 10 touches.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ronaldo at 41 became the oldest outfield player to start a World Cup match, goalless from 10 touches.

Cristiano Ronaldo started Portugal's 1-1 draw with DR Congo on 17 June and, at 41, became the oldest outfield player to begin a World Cup match, surpassing Canada's Atiba Hutchinson from 2022 1. He managed no goals from 10 touches across the 90 minutes. Lowdown had flagged this as the oldest World Cup field on record before kickoff, with Ronaldo among five players over 40 .

Lionel Messi had written the opposite chapter a day earlier, scoring a hat-trick to tie Miroslav Klose's all-time World Cup scoring record . Both men reached a sixth World Cup at the same tournament, the first pair ever to do so . Within 24 hours one chased the scoring record while the other could not find a single shot, two elder statesmen filing what look like their closing entries.

Ronaldo's goalless start sits inside the round's broader theme. The expanded field has produced records at both age extremes, and like the debut goals around it, his fell in a match Portugal did not win. The 10-touch line will follow him into the knockout rounds if Portugal reach them, a number that reads as decline rather than the milestone the age record might suggest.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cristiano Ronaldo is 41 years old, which makes him unusually old to still be playing at the highest level of international football. Outfield players (everyone except goalkeepers) typically retire from international football in their early to mid-30s because the physical demands are so high. On 17 June, Ronaldo started Portugal's match against DR Congo in Houston. This made him the oldest outfield player ever to start a World Cup match, breaking a record previously held by Canada's Atiba Hutchinson from the 2022 tournament. Ronaldo only touched the ball 10 times all match and did not score, while Lionel Messi had scored a hat-trick the day before. The contrast between the two players' performances on the same matchday became a talking point.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Ronaldo's selection at 41 reflects two forces. Portugal's coaching setup under Roberto Martinez has built the attack around Ronaldo's positional awareness and off-ball movement rather than his earlier explosive pace, allowing him to perform as a penalty-area presence even at reduced physical intensity. The coaching choice is not simply sentimental; Martinez has consistently started him in qualification and friendly matches through 2025-26.

The deeper structural condition is that modern sports science, particularly load management and muscle recovery protocols developed in club football over the last decade, has extended elite centre-forward careers by several years beyond what the 1990s-era benchmarks predicted. Ronaldo's physical maintenance regime at Al-Nassr, whatever its limitations, has kept him a viable international starter.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Ronaldo's 10-touch, zero-goal performance against DR Congo raises questions about whether Portugal's starting shape limits the attacking potential of younger forwards who could offer greater mobility.

  • Meaning

    Both Messi (ID:4284) and Ronaldo appearing at a sixth World Cup together, writing opposite chapters in the same 24-hour window, completes a 20-year narrative arc that has no structural parallel in international football history.

First Reported In

Update #22 · Firsts and lasts: a record-day collision

ESPN· 18 Jun 2026
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