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Spain edge Portugal 1-0 as late Merino goal ends Ronaldo's World Cup hopes

Mikel Merino of Spain celebrates after scoring his team's first goal with teammates during FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Portugal and Spain at Dallas Stadium in Arlington, Texas, United States on July 06, 2026. (AA Photo)
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Mikel Merino of Spain celebrates after scoring his team's first goal with teammates during FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Portugal and Spain at Dallas Stadium in Arlington, Texas, United States on July 06, 2026. (AA Photo)
July 07, 2026 01:30 AM GMT+03:00

Mikel Merino came off the bench to score in the ninth minute of injury time, sending Spain into the World Cup quarter-finals with a 1-0 victory over Portugal at AT&T Stadium on Monday.

Before a crowd of 70,649 in Arlington, a tight and largely attritional Iberian derby was settled by a moment of clinical precision, substitute Ferran Torres threading a through ball into Merino's path, the Arsenal midfielder slotting calmly past Diogo Costa into the bottom-left corner to break Portuguese hearts.

Spain, who started the evening as statistical favourites, will now face either co-hosts United States or Belgium in the last eight.

Portugal, meanwhile, are eliminated, and the cameras lingered repeatedly on Cristiano Ronaldo, 41 years old and almost certainly playing in his last major tournament, and potentially his final match for his country.

A cagey first half defined by missed chances

The contest took time to find its feet. Spain, unchanged from the side that dismantled Austria 3-0 in the previous round, showed the greater ambition in attack.

Their best opportunity of the first half came in the ninth minute, when a rapid counter-attack ended with Mikel Oyarzabal dragging wide of the right post with only Costa to beat, a miss that would loom large.

A double save from Costa at the 17-minute mark, denying first Lamine Yamal and then Alex Baena in quick succession, underlined the goalkeeper's importance to his side.

Portugal's most dangerous moment arrived in the 41st minute, when Nuno Mendes struck cleanly from outside the box, only for the ball to clip Pedro Porro and cannon off the crossbar.

The half ended goalless, with Spain holding a clear statistical edge, an expected goals figure of 0.98 to Portugal's 0.26.

A significant statistic from Opta further illustrated Portugal's struggles: Ronaldo, with 17 shots across the tournament to that point and zero chances created for teammates, was on course for the most shots by any player in a single World Cup edition since records began in 1966, without providing a single assist.

Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal warms up prior the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Portugal and Spain at Dallas Stadium in Arlington, Texas, United States on July 6, 2026. (AA Photo)
Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal warms up prior the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Portugal and Spain at Dallas Stadium in Arlington, Texas, United States on July 6, 2026. (AA Photo)

Second half stalemate tests both benches

The second half produced little of the urgency either side needed. Roberto Martinez was forced into a change shortly after the hour when Mendes, Portugal's most effective performer, went off injured, replaced by Nelson Semedo.

The 32-year-old Fenerbahce defender faced an immediate test: marking Yamal, the Barcelona teenager who had caused persistent trouble down Spain's left.

Coach Luis de la Fuente turned to his bench in the 85th minute, withdrawing the effective Dani Olmo and Pedro, replacing them with Merino and Fabian Ruiz, a shift suggesting Spain were willing to play more directly as normal time wound down. With Opta's model putting the probability of extra time at over 51 per cent heading into the final moments, both teams appeared headed for more football.

Merino's moment settles an attritional contest

It was de la Fuente's substitutions that ultimately made the difference. In the first minute of injury time, Spain worked a quick free-kick, Fabian Ruiz found Torres, and Torres slipped a precise pass into the path of Merino, who had only just entered the field minutes earlier. The finish was composed and decisive.

Portugal mounted one last rally. Bruno Fernandes launched a cross that Joao Neves met with a diving header that went agonisingly wide. Bernardo Silva, introduced as a substitute, headed onto the roof of the net in the 90th minute when a goal seemed more likely than not. Spain held on.

The final expected goals figures told the full story of the evening: Spain 1.77, Portugal 0.60.

Historic streaks and a potential farewell

The result extended Spain's remarkable unbeaten run to 34 matches across all competitions, leaving them one game shy of their all-time record of 35 set between 2007 and 2009.

Crucially, Spain also kept a fifth consecutive clean sheet at this World Cup, having also drawn 0-0 in their final group game at the 2022 edition, meaning they now stand one clean sheet away from becoming the first team in history to record six successive shutouts at the tournament.

For Portugal, the defeat extends a painful record against their Iberian neighbours. In 12 competitive meetings overall, Portugal have managed just a single victory, a group-stage win at Euro 2004, the last time Ronaldo faced Spain at a major tournament.

Sunday night was their sixth meeting at a major tournament, and another loss.

The Selecao had reached this stage by finishing second in Group K before coming from behind to beat Croatia 2-1 in the round of 32, with a 94th-minute Goncalo Ramos winner completing the comeback. For them, the run ends here.

July 07, 2026 01:30 AM GMT+03:00
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