
Spain laboured to an uninspiring 1-0 victory over Iberian rivals Portugal in their last-16 tie to set up a quarter-final meeting with the winners of USA vs Belgium.
In an underwhelming game that failed to live up to billing in Dallas, Mikel Merino proved decisive, arriving late from the bench and latching onto a smart Ferran Torres pass to plant beyond the clutches of Diogo Costa in second-half stoppage time.
His calm and conclusive strike was the only real moment of quality from an encounter boasting so many superstars, none of whom were able to rise to the occasion quite in the way many rival nations' high-profile players have.
As it happened | Teams | Stats | Knockout bracket
World Cup day-by-day schedule | Latest: World Cup
Follow our World Cup coverage in the Sky Sports App
The result, of course, had consequences for Portugal beyond ending their tournament. Roberto Martinez stepped down as head coach, while Cristiano Ronaldo revealed before the game that this summer would mark his last appearance at a World Cup.
The Portugal captain was visibly emotional at the close, knowing his side failed to properly show up for his final farewell tour. There will be no fairytale ending to an international career that spectacularly spanned two decades.
The late, late show
There have now been 10 last-minute winners (90th or 120th) at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the outright most in a single edition of the competition.
Ronaldo was actually the only Portugal player to land a shot on target all night, with Spain's immense control and impressive defensive structure winning out. They have become the first team in World Cup history to register six successive clean sheets, and are yet to concede a goal at this tournament.
Luis de la Fuente's side advance to the quarter-final stage for the first time since winning their only World Cup title back in 2010 in South Africa, and face either the United States or Belgium on Friday.
Also See:
World Cup 2026 schedule - your day-by-day guide
Knockout bracket and fixtures
Latest World Cup news
Download the Sky Sports app
The key moments from Arlington
3: SAVE! Mikel Oyarzabal draws a decent stop from Diogo Costa by landing the first effort on target of the game.
8: SITTER! Oyarzabal dragged his effort wide from a promising position in acres of space.
11: VAR! Ronaldo claims for a penalty after a scuffle with Rodri in the box, where he ends up floored. VAR check but nothing given.
16: DOUBLE SAVE! Diogo Costa produces two stops to deny both Lamine Yamal and Baena on the follow-up.
37: CHANCE! Ronaldo latches onto a glancing header across goal from Joao Felix but can't beat Unai Simon.
41: Nuno Mendes rattles a rasping effort off the crossbar via the head of Pedro Porro.
76: MISS! Bruno Fernandes crashes an effort into the side-netting after good work from substitute Rafael Leao.
90+1: GOAL! Merino is slipped through by Torres and beats Costa with a neat, low finish inside the post.
Farewell, Cristiano
Cristiano Ronaldo's 27th World Cup appearance conspired to be his last. He scored in all six editions in which he appeared, holding the all-time record for highest number of tournaments scored at.
An Iberian derby to forget...
Analysis by Sky Sports' Laura Hunter:
For two nations steeped in neighbourly tension and bursting with endless talent, this contest failed to deliver on many levels. The expectation was through the roof but what actually transpired was a cagey affair between two sides lacking spark.
The big hitters were largely anonymous. There was none of the old foe feel, added spice, or sense of occasion you would associate with his type of rivalry.
Merino's composed finish in stoppage time was at least respite from the underwhelming back and forth of the regulation 90 minutes - not the first time the Arsenal forward has come up clutch to settle a big game.
In Portugal the inquest will begin: Was Ronaldo the right man to lead this young, vibrant and exciting ensemble of Portuguese players? Was their campaign sacrificed to give their ageing talisman his last hurrah? Perhaps.
The stoic look on his face and brief acknowledging wave to fans showed this was not the desired end, and yet, for most other observers, it always felt like the most probable.
Rate the players
Monterosa
This content is provided by Monterosa, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable Monterosa cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.
Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to Monterosa cookies.
To view this content you can use the button below to allow Monterosa cookies for this session only.
View original source — Sky Sports ↗
