Cristiano Ronaldo did not travel with the squad for another key fixture, and the absence spoke louder than any statement. For weeks, the Portuguese forward has been missing from matchday plans at Al-Nassr FC, and the explanation circulating in Saudi football circles is not injury, rest, or rotation. It is frustration.
Ronaldo arrived in the Saudi Pro League with a clear vision: help turn Al-Nassr into a genuine continental contender by attracting elite talent and building a team capable of winning major trophies. That blueprint required aggressive recruitment, recognizable names, and a squad built to compete with the region’s strongest sides. Instead, what he is seeing now feels like the opposite.
The tipping point appears to have been the transfer of Karim Benzema to a direct rival. Watching a former teammate strengthen Al-Hilal SFC while his own club stood still has not gone down well.
When Ronaldo committed to Saudi football, it was understood that he would be a cornerstone of a larger project. The idea was not simply to sign one global superstar, but to use that arrival as a catalyst. The message was that Al-Nassr would become a magnet for high-profile players still capable of performing at the highest level.
That has not happened.
During the latest transfer window, Al-Nassr made only two low-profile additions. There were no marquee signings, no statement moves, and no evidence of the aggressive market approach Ronaldo expected. At the same time, rivals strengthened.
From Ronaldo’s perspective, the contrast is stark. He has delivered on the pitch—17 goals in 18 matches this season—while the club’s sporting strategy appears cautious and restrained. For a player whose competitive drive is tied directly to winning titles, this is more than a minor disagreement. It is a clash of priorities.
Benzema’s move to Al-Hilal amplified the problem. Seeing a rival add firepower while Al-Nassr failed to respond signaled, in Ronaldo’s eyes, that the project he bought into is not being executed with the urgency required.
Ronaldo’s decision to remove himself from recent matchday squads has created a visible tension between player and institution. The Saudi Pro League issued a carefully worded statement reminding the public that no individual, regardless of stature, dictates decisions beyond his club. The message was clear without naming him directly.
From the league’s standpoint, governance and financial balance come first. From Ronaldo’s standpoint, competitiveness comes first. Those two positions are now colliding in public view.
For now, the story is not about goals or results. It is about direction—and whether Al-Nassr is still moving in the one Cristiano Ronaldo believed in when he signed.















