When Cristiano Ronaldo arrived at Al-Nassr in 2023, the expectation was immediate dominance. The move was presented as a turning point not only for Saudi football but also for Ronaldo himself—a superstar entering a league where many assumed trophies would follow naturally.
That has not happened.
Despite the goals, the attention, and the enormous investment surrounding the project, Al-Nassr are once again watching how the Saudi Pro League title can drift away from them. And this latest setback may have been the most painful yet.
For most of the night, Al-Nassr looked ready to finally break through.
The Capital Derby carried enormous pressure because victory would have placed the club in complete control of the title race. The atmosphere reflected that tension from the beginning, and when defender Mohamed Simakan gave Al-Nassr the lead in the first half, the stadium sensed the moment had arrived.
The match became increasingly chaotic late on. Tempers exploded near the benches, players confronted each other repeatedly, and coaching staff became involved in heated arguments on the touchline. The pressure of the title race was visible everywhere.
Still, Al-Nassr remained ahead deep into stoppage time.
Then came the moment that changed everything.
As Al-Hilal pushed forward desperately, goalkeeper Bento Matheus Krepski rushed off his line trying to clear a long throw into the box. Instead of relieving the danger, he completely misjudged the situation, collided with his own teammate, and allowed the ball to end up in the net in the 99th minute.
The equalizer felt catastrophic because of what it represented. Instead of moving seven points clear, Al-Nassr suddenly lost control of the championship race again.
Television cameras immediately found Ronaldo on the bench after he had already been substituted. His reaction said everything. Furious and visibly frustrated, he walked straight down the tunnel after the final whistle.
Statistically, Ronaldo has done his part since arriving in Saudi Arabia. He continues scoring at an elite level, remains physically dominant for his age, and still produces decisive moments regularly.
But football history rarely remembers goals without trophies.
That reality is becoming increasingly uncomfortable around Al-Nassr. Since Ronaldo’s arrival, the club has repeatedly fallen short in the moments that matter most. Meanwhile, rivals continue collecting titles.
Last season, Karim Benzema lifted the league trophy with Al-Ittihad, adding another difficult comparison to Ronaldo’s Saudi experience. Ironically, the two former Real Madrid teammates arrived in the region carrying similar expectations, yet the outcomes have looked very different.
Part of the frustration reportedly comes from recruitment decisions. Saudi clubs backed by the Public Investment Fund have invested heavily across the league, but Ronaldo has allegedly felt that Al-Nassr were not strengthened aggressively enough compared to direct rivals.
That imbalance has become more visible during decisive stretches of the season.
Even though Ronaldo has delivered goals consistently, football remains collective. One player—even one of the greatest ever—cannot completely compensate for defensive instability, late mistakes, or squad imbalance over an entire campaign.

