Sometimes the scoreboard lies. It said Colombia 0-0 Portugal. It said nobody scored. It said nothing happened. And yet, for 90+ minutes inside a pulsating Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, there was barely a moment to breathe.

This was not a friendly. This was not a dead rubber. This was Colombia and Portugal — two of the tournament’s most star-studded squads — going at each other for group supremacy, with pride, momentum, and knockout-stage seeding all on the line. The goals refused to come, but the drama? That showed up in abundance.
Colombia finish as Group K winners with seven points. Portugal go through as runners-up with five. Both teams are through — but only one side gets to call itself top dog, and that honour belongs to Los Cafeteros.
Colombia Came to Dominate
From the first whistle, Colombia made their intentions crystal clear. Luis Díaz — electric, terrifying, relentless — beat João Cancelo down the left flank in the opening 60 seconds and whipped a cross into the box for Jhon Córdoba, whose header drifted agonisingly over the bar. A warning shot. And Portugal barely had time to compose themselves before the next wave arrived.

In the 17th minute, Córdoba powered past Bruno Fernandes and unleashed a rocket of a shot that forced a fine point-blank save from Diogo Costa. Then came the moment that had the entire stadium gasping — Jhon Arias, flying down the right, screwed a shot towards the far corner only for Rúben Neves to materialize from nowhere and flick it off the line. Goal-line clearance. Millimetres. The kind of moment that makes you grip the seat in front of you and never let go.

James Rodríguez, the heartbeat of everything Colombia do, was pulling strings all evening.

He became the first Colombian player ever to reach 11 World Cup appearances — surpassing legends Freddy Rincón and Carlos Valderrama — and he celebrated it the only way he knows how: by running the game. He created five chances, completed 38 passes in the final third (the second-most recorded by a Colombian in World Cup history), and was simply the most elegant player on the pitch.
Portugal Weren’t Dead Yet

Portugal, to their credit, didn’t come to Miami to roll over. Bruno Fernandes found himself free in front of goal in the 39th minute, but Camilo Vargas flung himself across to produce a stunning point-blank save. João Félix then chested the ball over a defender with outrageous skill and volleyed acrobatically — only to watch it sail over the bar.

Cristiano Ronaldo — marking his 25th World Cup appearance, second only to Messi all-time — was largely kept quiet all evening. He managed three shots and just 35 touches. The Colombian press made sure of that. Rafael Leão came off the bench in the 78th minute to inject life into Portugal’s attack, and in the final seconds he had one last chance to steal it — dragging a tight-angle shot just wide of the far post.
The Goal That Never Was

The most dramatic moment of the night didn’t produce a goal — it produced heartbreak. Deep into stoppage time, substitute Juan Fernando Quintero swung in a cross, and Davinson Sánchez met it perfectly at the far post, heading it powerfully into the net. The Miami crowd erupted. Colombia players sprinted to celebrate. And then the VAR screen flickered.

The review took just long enough to be excruciating. Sánchez’s toe — one single toe — had strayed fractionally past Rafael Leão. Offside. Goal ruled out. Colombia manager Néstor Lorenzo buried his head in his hands.

The match ended goalless. But the stats told the real story of who bossed it: 24 shots for Colombia to Portugal’s 13. Seven on target to two. The 37 total shots attempted made it the joint-most in a goalless match at the 2026 World Cup, and Colombia’s 24 shots were the most on record for the nation in any World Cup match, surpassing their 23 attempts against the USA back in 1994.
What Comes Next

Colombia head to Kansas City to face Ghana in the Round of 32, unbeaten in three group games and brimming with confidence. Portugal travel to Toronto to take on Croatia, knowing they have the talent to go far — but also knowing they haven’t quite clicked yet.

One team dominated. One team survived. Both are through. And the knockout stage just got a whole lot more interesting.
Man of the Match: Diogo Costa













