2022 FIFA World Cup Group H

Matches in Group H of the 2022 FIFA World Cup took place from 24 November to 2 December 2022.[1] The group consisted of Portugal, Ghana, Uruguay and South Korea. The top two teams, Portugal and South Korea, advanced to the round of 16.[2] Uruguay exited the tournament after failing to progress the group stage for the first time since 2002, with South Korea's shock 2–1 victory over Portugal contributing to the elimination.

The opening ceremony of the match between Uruguay and Portugal

Teams

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Draw position Team Pot Confederation Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings[3]
March 2022[nb 1] October 2022
H1   Portugal 1 UEFA UEFA second round Path C winners 29 March 2022 8th 2018 Third place (1966) 8 9
H2   Ghana 4 CAF CAF third round winners 29 March 2022 4th 2014 Quarter-finals (2010) 60 61
H3   Uruguay 2 CONMEBOL CONMEBOL Round Robin third place 24 March 2022 14th 2018 Winners (1930, 1950) 13 14
H4   South Korea 3 AFC AFC third round Group A runners-up 1 February 2022 11th 2018 Fourth place (2002) 29 28

Notes

  1. ^ The rankings of March 2022 were used for seeding for the final draw.

Standings

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Portugal 3 2 0 1 6 4 +2 6 Advanced to knockout stage
2   South Korea 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 4
3   Uruguay 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 4
4   Ghana 3 1 0 2 5 7 −2 3
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

In the round of 16:

  • The winners of Group H, Portugal, advanced to play the runners-up of Group G, Switzerland.
  • The runners-up of Group H, South Korea, advanced to play the winners of Group G, Brazil.

Matches

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All times listed are local, AST (UTC+3).[1]

Uruguay vs South Korea

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The teams had previously met eight times, including twice in the World Cup, both matches won by Uruguay: a 1–0 group stage victory in 1990 and a 2–1 round of 16 success in 2010.

The match ended in a goalless draw, with the best chances coming when Diego Godín and Federico Valverde both hit the post for Uruguay.

Uruguay  0–0  South Korea
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Uruguay
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
GK 23 Sergio Rochet
RB 22 Martín Cáceres   57'
CB 3 Diego Godín (c)
CB 2 José Giménez
LB 16 Mathías Olivera   79'
CM 15 Federico Valverde
CM 6 Rodrigo Bentancur
CM 5 Matías Vecino   79'
RF 8 Facundo Pellistri   88'
CF 9 Luis Suárez   64'
LF 11 Darwin Núñez
Substitutions:
FW 21 Edinson Cavani   64'
MF 7 Nicolás de la Cruz   79'
DF 17 Matías Viña   79'
DF 13 Guillermo Varela   88'
Manager:
Diego Alonso
 
GK 1 Kim Seung-gyu
RB 15 Kim Moon-hwan
CB 4 Kim Min-jae
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon
LB 3 Kim Jin-su
CM 6 Hwang In-beom
CM 5 Jung Woo-young
RW 17 Na Sang-ho   74'
AM 10 Lee Jae-sung   74'
LW 7 Son Heung-min (c)
CF 16 Hwang Ui-jo   74'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Cho Gue-sung   88'   74'
MF 13 Son Jun-ho   74'
MF 18 Lee Kang-in   74'
Manager:
  Paulo Bento   90+8'

Man of the Match:
Federico Valverde (Uruguay)[4]

Assistant referees:
Nicolas Danos (France)
Cyril Gringore (France)
Fourth official:
István Kovács (Romania)
Reserve assistant referee:
Vasile Marinescu (Romania)
Video assistant referee:
Jérôme Brisard (France)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Benoît Millot (France)
Djibril Camara (Senegal)
Rédouane Jiyed (Morocco)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Rafael Foltyn (Germany)

Portugal vs Ghana

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The teams had met once before, being Portugal's 2–1 group stage victory at the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

After a goalless first half, Portugal were awarded a penalty in the 65th minute, when Mohammed Salisu fouled Cristiano Ronaldo in the penalty area. Ronaldo took the penalty and scored, shooting high to the left of the goalkeeper, to put Portugal into the lead. André Ayew equalised for Ghana in the 73rd minute with a close range finish after a low cross from Mohammed Kudus on the left. Portugal swiftly responded with two quick goals from World Cup debutants, the first coming from João Félix in the 78th minute with a clipped finish from the right over the advancing goalkeeper, and the second from substitute Rafael Leão two minutes later with a low finish into the right corner of the goal after a pass from Bruno Fernandes. In the 89th minute, Ghanaian substitute Osman Bukari scored with a header from six yards out to reduce the deficit. Then, in stoppage time, Ghana nearly equalized when Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa put the ball on the ground, preparing to kick it upfield, and Ghana's Iñaki Williams came from behind Costa to take the ball but slipped as he was about to shoot, with the ball subsequently cleared from danger by Portugal.[5]

With his goal, Ronaldo became the first male player to score at five different FIFA World Cup tournaments.[6] At the age of 37 years and 292 days, he also became the second-oldest player to score at a World Cup, behind only Roger Milla for Cameroon in 1994 (aged 42 years and 39 days).[7]

Portugal  3–2  Ghana
Report
Attendance: 42,662
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Portugal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ghana
GK 22 Diogo Costa
RB 20 João Cancelo
CB 4 Rúben Dias
CB 13 Danilo Pereira   90+1'
LB 5 Raphaël Guerreiro
DM 18 Rúben Neves   77'
CM 8 Bruno Fernandes   90+5'
CM 25 Otávio   56'
AM 10 Bernardo Silva   88'
CF 11 João Félix   88'
CF 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (c)   88'
Substitutions:
MF 14 William Carvalho   56'
FW 15 Rafael Leão   77'
MF 6 João Palhinha   88'
FW 26 Gonçalo Ramos   88'
MF 17 João Mário   88'
Manager:
Fernando Santos
 
GK 1 Lawrence Ati-Zigi
CB 18 Daniel Amartey
CB 23 Alexander Djiku   90+2'
CB 4 Mohammed Salisu
RWB 26 Alidu Seidu   57'   66'
LWB 17 Baba Rahman
CM 5 Thomas Partey
CM 20 Mohammed Kudus   45+1'   77'
CM 21 Salis Abdul Samed   90+2'
CF 10 André Ayew (c)   49'   77'
CF 19 Iñaki Williams   90+1'
Substitutions:
DF 2 Tariq Lamptey   66'
MF 11 Osman Bukari   77'
FW 9 Jordan Ayew   77'
MF 8 Daniel-Kofi Kyereh   90+2'
FW 25 Antoine Semenyo   90+2'
Manager:
Otto Addo

Man of the Match:
Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal)[8]

Assistant referees:
Kyle Atkins (United States)
Corey Parker (United States)
Fourth official:
Stéphanie Frappart (France)
Reserve assistant referee:
Karen Díaz Medina (Mexico)
Video assistant referee:
Armando Villarreal (United States)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Drew Fischer (Canada)
Alessandro Giallatini (Italy)
Shaun Evans (Australia)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Elvis Noupue (Cameroon)

South Korea vs Ghana

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The teams had faced each other eight times, most recently in 2014, 4–0 friendly win by Ghana.

In the first half, Ghana scored two goals against the run of play within a ten-minute span to take a 2–0 lead, coming from Mohammed Salisu and Mohammed Kudus. South Korea would then reply in the second half with two goals of their own, both headers scored within three minutes of each other by Cho Gue-sung, to level the game at 2–2. Kudus scored the decisive goal and his second of the match in the 68th minute, coming after Iñaki Williams had mistimed his initial shot, to put Ghana back in front. Ghanaian goalkeeper Lawrence Ati-Zigi made multiple crucial saves and Salisu cleared an effort off the line late on to secure them a 3–2 victory.[9]

Cho Gue-sung and Kudus each became the first players to score multiple goals in a single World Cup match for their respective countries.[10]

When referee Anthony Taylor ended the game instead of allowing a South Korean player to kick off a corner, South Korea's head coach Paulo Bento ran onto the field and screamed at the referee, for which he was shown a red card, making it the first time in World Cup history that a coach was sent off after the conclusion of the match. Counting players' Leandro Cufré's and Josip Šimunić's red cards (both in 2006), this was the third time a sending off occurred after the match had ended.[11]

South Korea  2–3  Ghana
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ghana
GK 1 Kim Seung-gyu
RB 15 Kim Moon-hwan
CB 4 Kim Min-jae   90+2'
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon   77'
LB 3 Kim Jin-su
CM 6 Hwang In-beom
CM 5 Jung Woo-young   27'   78'
RW 22 Kwon Chang-hoon   57'
AM 25 Jeong Woo-yeong   46'
LW 7 Son Heung-min (c)
CF 9 Cho Gue-sung
Substitutions:
MF 17 Na Sang-ho   46'
MF 18 Lee Kang-in   57'
FW 16 Hwang Ui-jo   78'
DF 20 Kwon Kyung-won   90+2'
Manager:
  Paulo Bento   90+12'
 
GK 1 Lawrence Ati-Zigi
RB 2 Tariq Lamptey   73'   78'
CB 18 Daniel Amartey   21'
CB 4 Mohammed Salisu
LB 14 Gideon Mensah   88'
DM 21 Salis Abdul Samed
CM 5 Thomas Partey
CM 20 Mohammed Kudus   83'
RF 10 André Ayew (c)   78'
CF 19 Iñaki Williams
LF 9 Jordan Ayew   78'
Substitutions:
MF 22 Kamaldeen Sulemana   78'
MF 8 Daniel-Kofi Kyereh   78'
DF 3 Denis Odoi   78'
DF 23 Alexander Djiku   83'
DF 17 Baba Rahman   88'
Manager:
Otto Addo

Man of the Match:
Mohammed Kudus (Ghana)[12]

Assistant referees:
Gary Beswick (England)
Adam Nunn (England)
Fourth official:
Kevin Ortega (Peru)
Reserve assistant referee:
Michael Orué (Peru)
Video assistant referee:
Tomasz Kwiatkowski (Poland)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Alejandro Hernández Hernández (Spain)
Kyle Atkins (United States)
Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea (Spain)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Corey Parker (United States)

Portugal vs Uruguay

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The teams had met three times prior, including Uruguay's 2–1 round of 16 victory at the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Bruno Fernandes put Portugal into the lead during the second half when his cross from the left deceived Uruguay keeper Sergio Rochet, after Cristiano Ronaldo had tried to glance the ball past him with his head. Ronaldo was initially ruled as the goalscorer before FIFA determined that he hadn't connected with the ball, and instead awarded the goal to Fernandes.[13][14] Fernandes scored a second in the third minute of stoppage time, a penalty awarded by the VAR for handball by José Giménez, which he rolled into the left side of the net.[15] With this victory, Portugal secured a place in the knockout stage.[16]

Portugal  2–0  Uruguay
Report
Attendance: 88,668
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Portugal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Uruguay
GK 22 Diogo Costa
RB 20 João Cancelo
CB 4 Rúben Dias   89'
CB 3 Pepe
LB 19 Nuno Mendes   42'
DM 18 Rúben Neves   38'   69'
CM 10 Bernardo Silva
CM 14 William Carvalho   82'
AM 8 Bruno Fernandes
CF 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (c)   82'
CF 11 João Félix   77'   82'
Substitutions:
DF 5 Raphaël Guerreiro   42'
FW 15 Rafael Leão   69'
MF 23 Matheus Nunes   82'
FW 26 Gonçalo Ramos   82'
MF 6 João Palhinha   82'
Manager:
Fernando Santos
 
GK 23 Sergio Rochet
CB 2 José Giménez
CB 3 Diego Godín (c)   62'
CB 19 Sebastián Coates
DM 6 Rodrigo Bentancur   6'
CM 15 Federico Valverde
CM 5 Matías Vecino   62'
RW 13 Guillermo Varela
LW 16 Mathías Olivera   44'   86'
CF 11 Darwin Núñez   72'
CF 21 Edinson Cavani   72'
Substitutions:
FW 8 Facundo Pellistri   62'
MF 10 Giorgian de Arrascaeta   62'
FW 18 Maxi Gómez   72'
FW 9 Luis Suárez   72'
DF 17 Matías Viña   86'
Manager:
Diego Alonso

Man of the Match:
Bruno Fernandes (Portugal)[17]

Assistant referees:
Mohammadreza Mansouri (Iran)
Mohammadreza Abolfazli (Iran)
Fourth official:
Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)
Reserve assistant referee:
Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)
Video assistant referee:
Abdulla Al-Marri (Qatar)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Shaun Evans (Australia)
Anton Shchetinin (Australia)
Rédouane Jiyed (Morocco)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Ashley Beecham (Australia)

Ghana vs Uruguay

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The teams had one prior meeting, which came in the 2010 FIFA World Cup quarter-finals; Uruguay won 4–2 on penalties following a 1–1 draw after extra time.

In the first half, Ghana were awarded a penalty after Uruguay goalkeeper Sergio Rochet was adjudged to have fouled Mohammed Kudus inside the area; however, Rochet then saved the subsequent spot kick taken by Ghana captain André Ayew. Shortly after this, midfielder Giorgian de Arrascaeta scored Uruguay's first two goals of the tournament within a span of six minutes to earn his side a 2–0 half-time lead, which saw them rise to second place in the live group standings. However, Uruguay would then be pushed down to third in the table on goals scored following South Korea's winner against Portugal late into the second half of the group's other ongoing game. Uruguay were unable to find the third goal they now required to advance, with Ghana keeper Lawrence Ati-Zigi making saves late on to deny both Edinson Cavani and Maxi Gómez, and thus failed to progress past the first round for the first time since 2002. Defeat also saw Ghana eliminated, finishing bottom of the group with only three points.[18]

Referee Daniel Siebert and his assistants were angrily confronted by Uruguayan players following the final whistle, after both Siebert and the VAR had disagreed with Uruguay's penalty appeals in the second half: first for a coming together between Darwin Núñez and Ghana's Alidu Seidu, and then in stoppage time after Cavani went down in the area. In January 2023, FIFA would go on to punish several Uruguayan players for their actions in the aftermath of the contest, deeming their behaviour "discriminatory", "offensive", and a "violation of the principles of fair play"; substitute keeper Fernando Muslera and defender José Giménez both received four-match bans, while Cavani and captain Diego Godín each served a one-game suspension. All four players were also required to pay fines along with the nation's football association, and carry out a form of football community service.[19]

With De Arrascaeta's goals, Uruguay became the last team of all 32 participants to score at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.[20]

Ghana  0–2  Uruguay
Report
Attendance: 43,443
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ghana
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Uruguay
GK 1 Lawrence Ati-Zigi
RB 26 Alidu Seidu   90+9'
CB 18 Daniel Amartey
CB 4 Mohammed Salisu
LB 17 Baba Rahman
CM 5 Thomas Partey
CM 21 Salis Abdul Samed   72'
RW 20 Mohammed Kudus   90+8'
AM 10 André Ayew (c)   46'
LW 9 Jordan Ayew   46'
CF 19 Iñaki Williams   72'
Substitutions:
MF 22 Kamaldeen Sulemana   86'   46'
MF 11 Osman Bukari   46'
FW 25 Antoine Semenyo   72'
MF 8 Daniel-Kofi Kyereh   72'
MF 7 Abdul Fatawu Issahaku   90+8'
Manager:
Otto Addo
 
GK 23 Sergio Rochet
RB 13 Guillermo Varela
CB 2 José Giménez   90+10'
CB 19 Sebastián Coates   87'
LB 16 Mathías Olivera
RM 8 Facundo Pellistri   66'
CM 15 Federico Valverde
CM 6 Rodrigo Bentancur   34'
LM 10 Giorgian de Arrascaeta   80'
CF 9 Luis Suárez (c)   60'   66'
CF 11 Darwin Núñez   20'   80'
Substitutions:
MF 5 Matías Vecino   34'
FW 21 Edinson Cavani   90+10'   66'
MF 7 Nicolás de la Cruz   66'
FW 18 Maxi Gómez   80'
MF 24 Agustín Canobbio   80'
Manager:
Diego Alonso

Man of the Match:
Giorgian de Arrascaeta (Uruguay)[21]

Assistant referees:
Jan Seidel (Germany)
Rafael Foltyn (Germany)
Fourth official:
Yoshimi Yamashita (Japan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Vasile Marinescu (Romania)
Video assistant referee:
Bastian Dankert (Germany)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)
Ciro Carbone (Italy)
Paolo Valeri (Italy)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Alessandro Giallatini (Italy)

South Korea vs Portugal

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Prior to this match, the teams had met once before, being South Korea's 1–0 group stage victory in the 2002 FIFA World Cup (which they co-hosted with Japan).

A rotated Portugal side took the lead in the opening five minutes, when Ricardo Horta scored on his World Cup debut with a first-time shot. South Korea would equalize in the 27th minute, when Portugal failed to clear a corner which hit the back of Cristiano Ronaldo, landing at the feet of Kim Young-gwon who scored from close range. In a second half where both sides saw opportunities, South Korea would find the winner in stoppage time, after Son Heung-min recovered the ball off a counter from a Portugal corner and slipped it to Hwang Hee-chan, who finished his shot into the bottom corner of the net.[22]

This late victory saw South Korea leapfrog Uruguay in the group standings on goals scored to join Portugal in the knockout stage, progressing to the second round for the first time since 2010.

South Korea  2–1  Portugal
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Portugal
GK 1 Kim Seung-gyu
RB 15 Kim Moon-hwan
CB 20 Kwon Kyung-won
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon   81'
LB 3 Kim Jin-su
DM 5 Jung Woo-young
CM 6 Hwang In-beom
CM 18 Lee Kang-in   36'   81'
RF 10 Lee Jae-sung   65'
CF 9 Cho Gue-sung   90+3'
LF 7 Son Heung-min (c)
Substitutions:
MF 11 Hwang Hee-chan   90+2'   65'
FW 16 Hwang Ui-jo   81'
MF 13 Son Jun-ho   81'
DF 24 Cho Yu-min   90+3'
Manager:
  Sérgio Costa[note 1]
 
GK 22 Diogo Costa
RB 2 Diogo Dalot
CB 3 Pepe
CB 24 António Silva
LB 20 João Cancelo
DM 18 Rúben Neves   65'
CM 23 Matheus Nunes   65'
CM 16 Vitinha   81'
RF 21 Ricardo Horta
CF 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (c)   65'
LF 17 João Mário   81'
Substitutions:
MF 6 João Palhinha   65'
FW 15 Rafael Leão   65'
FW 9 André Silva   65'
FW 10 Bernardo Silva   81'
MF 14 William Carvalho   81'
Manager:
Fernando Santos

Man of the Match:
Hwang Hee-chan (South Korea)[23]

Assistant referees:
Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)
Gabriel Chade (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Maguette Ndiaye (Senegal)
Reserve assistant referee:
Djibril Camara (Senegal)
Video assistant referee:
Nicolás Gallo (Colombia)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Juan Soto (Venezuela)
Bruno Boschilia (Brazil)
Armando Villarreal (United States)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Bruno Pires (Brazil)

Discipline

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Fair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:[2]

  • first yellow card: −1 point;
  • indirect red card (second yellow card): −3 points;
  • direct red card: −4 points;
  • yellow card and direct red card: −5 points;

Only one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.

Team Match 1 Match 2 Match 3 Points
                                   
  Portugal 2 3 −5
  South Korea 1 2 2 −5
  Ghana 4 2 2 −8
  Uruguay 1 2 5 −8

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ South Korea manager Paulo Bento was suspended for the match due to his sending off in South Korea's match against Ghana. Assistant manager Sérgio Costa filled in as manager.

References

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  1. ^ a b "FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 – Match Schedule" (PDF). FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 11 August 2022. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Regulations – FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022" (PDF). FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 15 December 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  3. ^ "Men's Ranking". FIFA. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  4. ^ "Woodwork denies Uruguay in Korean stalemate". FIFA. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Portugal 3 Ghana 2". BBC Sport. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  6. ^ "Cristiano Ronaldo scores in fifth World Cup as Portugal see off Ghana in thriller". The Guardian. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  7. ^ "Portugal 3-2 Ghana: Cristiano Ronaldo creates yet another piece of history in five-goal thriller". Sky Sports. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  8. ^ "Portugal win thriller as Ronaldo makes World Cup history". FIFA. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  9. ^ "South Korea 2 Ghana 3". BBC Sport. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  10. ^ "South Korea 2-3 Ghana: Mohammed Kudus scores twice in pulsating encounter". Sky Sports. 29 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  11. ^ Steinmann, Pascal (28 November 2022). "WM 2022 – Historischer Platzverweis: Südkoreas Paulo Bento sieht gegen Ghana als erster Trainer der WM-Geschichte Rot" [World Cup 2022 – Historical sending-off: South Korea's Paulo Bento sees red against Ghana as first coach in World Cup history] (in German). Eurosport. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  12. ^ "Kudus hits Ghana winner in breathless Korea Republic clash". FIFA. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  13. ^ "Bruno Fernandes shines to lessen load on Cristiano Ronaldo as Portugal ease past Uruguay". The Independent. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  14. ^ "World Cup 2022: Cristiano Ronaldo comes close but misses out on landmark goal". BBC Sport. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  15. ^ "Portugal 2 Uruguay 0". BBC Sport. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  16. ^ "Portugal 2–0 Uruguay: Bruno Fernandes scores twice as Cristiano Ronaldo claims goal to qualify for last 16". Sky Sports. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  17. ^ "Fernandes strikes twice to confirm Portugal last-16 spot". FIFA. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  18. ^ "Ghana 0 Uruguay 2". BBC Sport. 2 December 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  19. ^ "Cavani among Uruguay players given bans for World Cup disorder". ESPN. 27 January 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  20. ^ Magomedova, Marina (12 June 2022). "Uruguayan Football Association president harshly criticizes referees at 2022 World Cup in Qatar". TelecomAsia. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  21. ^ "Uruguay out despite Ghana victory". FIFA. 2 December 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  22. ^ "South Korea 2 Portugal 1". BBC Sport. 2 December 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  23. ^ "Stoppage-time strike sends Korea Republic through". FIFA. 2 December 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
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