
Ronaldo’s aura fading? DR Congo midfielder’s frank admission after historic draw
Ngal’ayel Mukau said his side prepared no special plan to stop the Portuguese captain, noting age has diminished the once-feared forward, after Congo earned their first World Cup point in over 50 years.
The most striking verdict on Cristiano Ronaldo’s performance in Portugal’s opening World Cup 2026 fixture came not from pundits but from an opponent. After the Democratic Republic of Congo held the European side to a 1-1 draw and secured the nation’s first point at the tournament since appearing as Zaire in 1974, midfielder Ngal’ayel Mukau was asked whether his team had devised a specific strategy to contain the 41-year-old captain. His reply was disarmingly blunt: “To be honest, no, not really. We know that Ronaldo isn’t the same as before. He’s a bit older now.” Mukau immediately added that he still considered the Portuguese forward one of the greatest to play the game, but the damage to the mystique was done.
Ronaldo’s blank on the scoresheet contrasted sharply with the opening-day exploits of Kylian Mbappé and Lionel Messi, both of whom found the net for France and Argentina respectively. The Portuguese icon, competing in his sixth World Cup, cut an increasingly isolated figure as the Congolese defence held firm without the elaborate man-marking or double-teaming that once shadowed his every move. Viewed from European capitals, the draw was an early stumble for a side expected to dominate Group K; from Kinshasa, it was a transformative moment, proof that the Leopards had not travelled merely “to participate” but, as Mukau put it, “to create our own history.”
Reaction to Mukau’s words has split along familiar fault lines. In Latin America, where coverage of Ronaldo’s every gesture is often refracted through the prism of his rivalry with Messi, the remarks were framed as a lapidary verdict on a fading giant. Argentine and Mexican outlets highlighted the phrase “ya no es el mismo” (he’s not the same) as evidence of a generational changing of the guard. Gulf and Indian media, meanwhile, noted the broader symbolism: a nation with scant World Cup pedigree no longer felt compelled to build a game plan around a single ageing star. Analysts in London observed that the real sting lay not in disrespect but in the matter-of-fact tone — Mukau was not taunting, merely describing a tactical reality.
The episode raises uncomfortable questions for Portugal’s campaign. Ronaldo’s longevity is extraordinary, yet the aura of inevitability that once paralysed defenders appears to be waning. If emerging football nations now view him as a manageable threat rather than a force requiring extraordinary measures, the Seleção may need to accelerate a tactical evolution that relies less on individual talismans. For Ronaldo himself, the challenge is to redefine his role in a way that complements a talented supporting cast. The Congolese draw may be remembered less as an upset and more as a signpost: in a rapidly levelling global game, reverence for past greatness no longer guarantees a tactical advantage.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Cristiano Ronaldo's aura of invincibility is fading. DR Congo's midfielder admitted they had no special plan to stop him, suggesting the Portuguese star is no longer the same threat. The remarks have sparked debate about his declining impact.
A Congolese player harshly dismissed Cristiano Ronaldo, saying age has taken its toll and he is no longer the same. The blunt comment sparked controversy and was seen as mocking the Portuguese superstar. The draw exposed Ronaldo's decline.
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