
Portugal Survive Late VAR Drama to Edge Croatia and Set Up Spain Clash
A stoppage-time header from Gonçalo Ramos and a disallowed Croatian equaliser sent Portugal into the last 16, where they will face Spain.
Portugal advanced to the World Cup’s round of 16 in the most agonising fashion imaginable, defeating Croatia 2–1 in Toronto after a stoppage-time winner and a VAR review that annulled a Croatian equaliser deep into added time. Gonçalo Ramos, on as a substitute, rose to meet a Rafael Leão cross in the 94th minute and powered a header past Dominik Livaković. Croatia thought they had forced extra time when Joško Gvardiol bundled the ball home in the 103rd minute, but the goal was disallowed after a prolonged video review determined that Igor Matanović had made the faintest of touches on the preceding cross, leaving Mario Pašalić offside. The decision, confirmed by the sensor inside the match ball, sparked furious protests from Croatian players and saw bottles thrown from the stands.
The contest had earlier swung Croatia’s way when Ivan Perišić, unmarked at the back post, drove a low shot through Diogo Costa’s legs in the 53rd minute. Portugal, who had dominated possession in a goalless first half, responded with urgency. Cristiano Ronaldo saw a delicate chip ruled out for offside, but was handed a reprieve when VAR spotted Nikola Vlašić’s tug on Renato Veiga at a corner. Ronaldo converted the penalty straight down the middle in the 68th minute, becoming the oldest player to score in a men’s World Cup knockout match at 41 years and 147 days. It was also his first goal in a World Cup knockout tie, ending a drought that had stretched across six tournaments.
The match carried an emotional weight beyond the pitch. It fell on the first anniversary of the death of former Portugal forward Diogo Jota, who was killed in a car crash alongside his brother. After the final whistle, Ronaldo pulled on a shirt bearing Jota’s number 21 and led his teammates in a tribute, later telling broadcasters that the team had felt Jota’s presence. European media noted the poignancy of the moment, with Portuguese outlets describing the victory as a gift to their late teammate.
Croatia’s exit was particularly cruel. Luka Modrić, at 40, delivered a masterful midfield performance and was consoled by Ronaldo after the final whistle in what is widely expected to be his last World Cup appearance. Croatian commentators expressed disbelief at the VAR intervention, but the technology’s data left no room for appeal. Portugal now face Spain in a round-of-16 Iberian derby in Dallas on Monday, a fixture that will test whether Roberto Martínez’s side can build on a performance that was as resilient as it was chaotic.
| Arab Gulf press | +0.80 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.30 | critical |
| Latin American press | 0.00 | neutral |
Portugal showed the character of winners, turning the match around in the dying seconds.
The heroic portrayal of a single technical gesture (the 94th-minute goal) is presented as proof of moral and sporting superiority, neglecting tactical analysis of the match.
American sports coverage is under fire, but Fox insists on the professionalism of its analysts.
The focus is shifted from the sporting event to the media controversy, using the defense of insiders as a pretext for criticizing the international press.
The World Cup continues with its schedule; Portugal and Spain prepare for their clash.
The event is reduced to a mere fixture, neutralizing the emotional charge of the match.
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