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Rúben Diogo da Silva Neves (Portuguese pronunciation:, born 13 March 1997) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Saudi Pro League club Al-Hilal [4] and the Portugal national team. Neves started his career with Porto and made his first-team debut at the age
The head coach of the team is Roberto Martínez, [4] and the captain is Cristiano Ronaldo, who also holds the team records for most caps and most goals. Portugal's first participation in a major tournament finals was at the 1966 World Cup , which saw a team featuring Ballon d'Or winner Eusébio finish in third place.
Afterwards, Neves enjoyed two campaigns as a professional with C.D. Aves in the Segunda Liga. He played his first match in the competition on 11 August 2013 in a 0–2 home loss against C.F. União where he featured the 90 minutes, [ 2 ] and scored his first goal the following weekend, helping the visitors to a 1–1 draw at U.D. Oliveirense .
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo look on during the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Portugal and Switzerland, at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Darko ...
Cristiano Ronaldo is Portugal's most capped player. This is a list of players who earned 25 or more caps for the Portugal national football team. For all players who have played for Portugal, see Category:Portugal men's international footballers. As of November 2024, 125 players have reached this milestone for Portugal.
WARSAW (Reuters) -Dutch police have arrested two players from Polish soccer team Legia Warsaw following their Europa Conference League match against AZ Alkmaar, officials said, prompting an angry ...
A girl's youth basketball coach has been arrested after he allegedly drove into someone following an argument at a school in Connecticut. Bryan Baez-Rivera allegedly drove his vehicle into an ...
Argentina 3–0 Portugal (Cuenca, Spain; 05 August 1995) Biggest win Portugal 10–0 Kazakhstan (Aveiro, Portugal; 10 October 2018) Portugal 10–0 Liechtenstein (Oeiras, Portugal; 13 November 2024) Biggest defeat Portugal 0–5 Brazil (Tampere, Finland; 17 August 2003) Portugal 0–5 Germany (Algarve, Portugal; 9 February 2016) World Cup