
Cristiano Ronaldo unlikely to play in India against FC Goa in AFC Champions League Two; Here's why
Cristiano Ronaldo's fans in India were thrilled when the AFC Champions League Two 2025-26 group stage draw placed his club, Al Nassr, in the same group as FC Goa. The draw, held on August 15, confirmed that the Saudi Pro League side will compete in Group D alongside FC Goa, Iraq's Al Zawra'a, and Tajikistan's FC Istiklol.
The fixture raised hopes of seeing the five-time Ballon d'Or winner in action on Indian soil for the very first time. However, reports indicate that Ronaldo's participation in away matches, including the one in India, is far from certain.
According to multiple reports, the Portuguese superstar's contract reportedly includes clauses allowing him to skip certain away trips in continental competitions. This means the forward could opt out of travelling to India for the clash against FC Goa.
If Ronaldo decides to give the trip a miss, Indian football fans may have to wait longer to watch him play live in the country. The final decision is expected closer to the match date, depending on Al Nassr's schedule, travel considerations, and the player's personal choice.
For now, the possibility remains — but it's a slim one — that Cristiano Ronaldo will make his long-awaited debut in India this season.
Ahmedabad Plane Crash
Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at BusinessUpturn.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Napoli hold talks to sign Rasmus Hojlund as Amorim makes his plan clear
Manchester United head coach Ruben Amorim has a 'clear plan' for his forward line amid interest from Serie A champions Napoli in Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee, Fabrizio Romano reveals. Panic in Naples Napoli, spearheaded to their Scudetto triumph last season by former United star Scott McTominay, are seeking to defend their title this season under Antonio Conte. But the Italian side have suffered a last-minute blow to their pre-season with star striker Romelu Lukaku ruled out for around three months after sustaining a 'high-grade injury in his thigh' in a friendly against Olympiacos. This has led Napoli to immediately explore the forward market with their season opener against Sassuolo just six days away. The Neapolitans have previously been linked with moves for Hojlund and Zirkzee with reports resurfacing today of renewed interest in both United players. But Romano reveals Napoli will only be able to sign one of the duo as Amorim has a 'clear plan' on who he wants to keep at Old Trafford this season. Tweet: The Italian transfer expert contends United 'want to keep Joshua Zirkzee [with] no talks [with Napoli] despite links today' while Hojlund is free to leave following the signing of Bejamin Sesko last week. A return to Italy for Hojlund? Romano reveals Napoli established 'direct contact' with their Old Trafford counterparts today to ask for the 'conditions' of a loan deal for Hojlund. United would prefer a permanent sale of the Denmark international but there is internal recognition that they would not receive a transfer fee which would surpass his remaining book value, believed to be around £45 million. This means if Hojlund was to be sold for a fee lower than this, his sale would actually incur a negative hit from a PSR perspective. A loan with a fee and wage coverage would, therefore, represent a better deal for United with the hope that Hojlund would regain form and increase his transfer value by next summer. AC Milan had been leading the race to sign the 22-year-old striker on loan, but now they face competition from a domestic rival. From Hojlund's perspective, he would prefer to remain at Old Trafford and fight for his place. However, Amorim has made it clear he has fallen down the pecking order with the Dane not even making the bench against Arsenal yesterday while Zirkzee did, despite not having played a minute in pre-season. The Portuguese coach's plan for Hojlund appears clear: play in Italy or sit in the stands in Manchester. Featured image Matt McNulty via Getty Images online polls Follow us on Bluesky: @


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Al Nassr vs. Al Ittihad: How to watch Saudi Super Cup, TV channel, live stream
Al Nassr faces Al Ittihad on Tuesday in the Saudi Super Cup semifinal in Hong Kong. The season-opening competition will feature Al Ahli and Al Qadsiah in the other semifinal on Wednesday. The winners will meet in the final on Saturday. Al Ittihad, the champion of last season's Saudi Pro League, won both meetings against Al Nassr last season. Even with another prolific season from the league's top scorer Cristiano Ronaldo, Al Nassr could only finish third and ended the campaign without a trophy. Watch Al Nassr vs. Al Ittihad on Fubo Karim Benzema, Ronaldo's longtime teammate at Real Madrid, scored 21 league goals for Al Ittihad last season as he continues to find the net at age 37. After signing Ronaldo to a two-year contract extension in June, Al Nassr has continued to spend big in the transfer window. The club has added Ronaldo's international teammate João Félix, former Bayern Munich star Kingsley Coman and ex-Barcelona defender Iñigo Martínez in the last month. Here is everything you need to know ahead of the game. Al Nassr vs. Al Ittihad (Saudi Super Cup semifinal) We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage


Forbes
5 hours ago
- Forbes
Soaring Towards Algarve's New $50 Million Trophy Property Benchmark
Landing at Faro Airport at dusk. The welcoming glow of the Western Algarve is now more accessible, with a new direct route from Newark Liberty International. ©Jose A Constantino/Shutterstock It's exactly 60 years ago this summer that Portugal's Algarve coast dug its touristic toes into the sand for the first time. The unveiling of Faro airport in July 1965 opened the floodgates for the first charter flights. New roads and hotel resorts followed. Gradually, this southern Portuguese coastline of remote fishing villages and beachfront land too salty to farm began to garner a fond international following—especially among holiday home-buying Brits who liked a spot of warm winter golf. The Algarve coastline is one of the most distinctive in Europe, its eastern and central stretches characterized by tropical-looking sand-barrier islands separated from the mainland by the dazzling Ria Formosa natural park. The wilder West, meanwhile, is marked by vast, primeval cliffs that drop into an unforgiving ocean. And now it's the turn of American house-hunters to tap into the outdoor joys of living in Europe's western-most coast (just think of the sunsets)—with a new tier of super-prime property to attract them, some at prices even more eye-watering than a face full of Atlantic seawater. Faro's Ria Formosa Natural Park stretches 60km (37 miles) along the Algarve coast. You don't even need to squint to see the flamingos, crabs and oystercatchers. The European chameleon may prove more elusive. ©Kristof Bellens/Shutterstock The new United Airlines route between Newark Liberty International Airport and Faro Airport has piqued the curiosity of East Coasters. 'It removes a layer of travel complexity and opens up the Algarve as a viable second-home market for U.S. buyers,' comments Christina Hippisley from the Portuguese Chamber of Commerce in the UK. This Iberian nook is often described as 'the Hamptons of Portugal,' sharing the same heady mix of utter luxury for the trophy-hunting 0.1% alongside the simple pleasures of watching flamingos strutting along the salt pans and the scuttling crabs revealed by the receding tide in the Ria Formosa. The Algarve's resort-cum-curated town of Vilamoura is turning the heads of relocating American families with top schools, healthcare and its world-class marina. ©Sopotnicki/Shutterstock But buyers from Silicon Valley to Texas are also eyeing up the Algarve in greater numbers than ever before. In Vilamoura—which, at nearly 2,000 hectares, including five golf courses, Portugal's largest marina and 2km (1.25 miles) of beach frontage among its attractions, is too big to call a resort, more a curated town. One tech entrepreneur from San Francisco calls out 'the golf, marina, top-tier healthcare and schools' as the impetus for relocating his family there in recent months. More are sure to follow as Vilamoura, soon to turn 60 years old, continues to grow and go upmarket, including with a new country club where membership will be available only to an 'inner circle' of property buyers. 'Demand from the U.S. has grown significantly, with many American buyers viewing Portugal as a viable 'Plan B' destination,' comments Mariana Rodrigues from Portugal Forbes Global Properties . 'They tend to range from their late 30s to early 60s—often professionals, entrepreneurs or executives who can work abroad remotely for U.S.-based companies. And who are drawn by the quality of life, political stability and international school options within the Golden Triangle,' she says of the prime central Algarve equilateral with the resorts of Quinta do Lago and Vale do Lobo as its base. Demand from the U.S. has grown significantly, with many American buyers viewing Portugal as a viable 'Plan B' destination. Mariana Rodrigues, Portugal Forbes Global Properties At the heart of the Algarve's Golden Triangle, Aquadar is an ambitious architectural landmark scheduled to complete in 2026. On the marketing for €45 million / $52.5 million with Francisco Garcia of Portugal Forbes Global Properties. Portugal Forbes Global Properties (render) Developers are dipping their own toes in the water with new mega-sized one-off villas—some like mini-resorts in their own right—whose marketing price tags break the €40 million ($46m) threshold. 'Nothing has sold here at this price before,' comments Francisco Garcia, partner at Portugal Forbes Global Properties, who is marketing one of these gargantuan new trophy homes: an angular, ultra-modern, 3,000-square-meter villa called Aquadar. Currently under construction, the property will sit within its own 13-hectare 'private forest' between Quinta do Lago and Vale do Lobo. Garcia is confident that someone will be willing to pay its €45 million ($52.7m) asking price as it nears completion. 'The strength of the U.S. market will help that happen,' he adds. When completed, Aquadar will cover around 2,300 square meters (nearly 25,000 sq ft), set in 13 hectares of private forest. Portugal Forbes Global Properties (render) Such passion projects, as Garcia describes Aquadar, exist mainly within the Golden Triangle, and it's almost unheard of to find a plot of this size there. 'It takes years of joining pieces of land together, persuading different owners to sell, which they rarely want to, even if you offer them significant money,' he says. Aquadar's Dutch developer, Nico Van Wanrooij, founder of developer Fastrooij—whose projects, says Garcia, have become a reference for super-prime property in Portugal—can also lay claim to the crown jewel, price-wise certainly, in Quinta do Lago. There's stiff competition. High-profile architects such as Vasco Vieira (see his monumental Villa Zen, on the market for €22 million/$25.7 million) and Joao Cabrita are among those designing the next generation of mansions on the resort, which itself has become an architectural showcase for super-prime luxury. Villa Zen's bold contemporary lines are representative of the Algarve's new wave of ultra-modern architecture, especially in evidence in Quinta do Lago. Portugal Forbes Global Properties But Fastrooij's Villa Soprano, which is being marketed off-plan for €42.5 million ($49.7m), has a frontline plot on the Ria Formosa estuary that eludes any other home in Quinta do Lago. And the resort 'still has space to have a nice journey,' says Garcia, referring to the potential for Quinta's prices to rise further, due to a lack of buildable land and high demand from international UHNW buyers. Prices are now around €14,000 (~$16,000) per square meter for the prime villas, an increase of somewhere between 10% and 30% in the last year, depending on which source you believe. The direction of travel, however, is clear. Newly constructed, Villa Zen is a six-bedroom, eight-bathroom villa designed for immersion into the Quinta do Lago lifestyle: sun, fitness, golf and nature—with all the domestic amenities for year-round family living. Portugal Forbes Global Propeties The ditching of Portugal's Golden Visa for property buyers (which gave residency in return for a minimum €500,000 investment) and the tax-friendly Non-Habitual Resident scheme, for those who spent more than half the year there, seems to have done little to dent demand from ultra-wealthy overseas buyers. 'The Golden Visa remains a compelling route through fund-based options, alongside a range of flexible D-visa pathways that continue to make Portugal an attractive and accessible choice for international buyers,' comments Chitra Stern, CEO of Martinhal Hotels and Resorts. Stern and her husband, Roman, took a punt on out-of-the-way Sagres, a sleepy surfer town in the Western Algarve, in recession-mired 2010, and turned it into a holiday destination for wealthy, worn-out parents with the beachfront Martinhal Sagres resort. Resale properties there guarantee a €20,000 annual return and 10 weeks personal usage. Now they are turning their attention to the popular seaside village of Luz, where their new project, Martinhal Residences Praia da Luz, provides a more urban setting—strollable to shops, restaurants and golden sands—for year-round living. Pivotal to the charm of the Western Algarve is the connection with nature and tradition: clifftop walks, buying your fish straight from the boats on the beach, coffee with a custardy pastéis de nata in a shady square. Farther west, 40% of buyers in the new Salema Beach Village development are from the U.S., drawn by the relative value for money and the sense of escape from global turmoil in this remote, edge-of-the-continent location. Pivotal to the charm of the Algarve's western coast are the simple pleasures: clifftop walks, buying your fish straight from the boats on the beach, coffee with a custardy pastéis de nata in a shady square. American hotel brands are also reeling in interest from across the ocean and providing a novel proposition for HNW buyers. Viceroy at Ombria Algarve—an inland resort whose golf course snakes along a rural valley near Loulé—is an exquisitely designed modern interpretation of a traditional hilltop village. Its crisp white buildings, serviced by a five-star hotel, conceal branded, fully-furnished properties that offer owners 70 days' use per year—appealing to those 'Plan B' buyers who aren't ready to make a full-time jump just yet. The rest of the time, they generate income by sitting in the Viceroy's rental pool. 'Some long-distance buyers have never used their property,' comments João Costa, Ombria's Chief Commercial Officer, of the resort that has taken 20 years to come to fruition. 'They are looking to resell in five or 10 years, and some of those who bought when the project first launched have seen prices double in five years.' The 18-hole golf course and properties at Ombria Algarve, which currently includes the Viceroy residences (right) and the dozen in-development Alcedo Villas, ranging from 3 to 7 bedrooms. Ombria Algarve Future phases of large, detached villas will have no restrictions on usage, for those looking to capitalize on the sense of tranquility and security that a high-end resort in the Algarve's (relative) wilderness offers. There's also a big focus at Ombria on sustainability: the resort relies on carbon-free geothermal energy systems buried 165 feet below ground. 'Most of our buyers are thinking of the future value of the property—their exit strategy—and know that sustainability features will be crucial,' says Costa. Beyond invisible geothermal systems, all eyes are on just who the Algarve's first 50-million-dollar buyers will be—lifestyle-focused investors prepared to pay handsomely for the way this coast does the simple things in life, in style. Portugal Forbes Global Properties is a member of Forbes Global Properties, the invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real-estate partner of Forbes.