Cristiano Ronaldo was minutes away from another defining night in Saudi Arabia. Al-Nassr had the lead, the home crowd was already thinking about the trophy, and the championship picture looked ready to tilt even further in their favour. Then came the kind of late twist that can change a season.
Al-Hilal struck in stoppage time, and what looked like a title-clinching evening for Al-Nassr ended in a 1-1 draw that keeps the race alive.
The match itself had already carried the feel of a final. Al-Nassr knew exactly what was at stake, and they played like a side that understood the value of every minute.
Mohamed Simakan opened the scoring in the 37th minute, giving Al-Nassr the lead they had worked for through a tight first half.
For long stretches after that, the home side looked organized, composed, and in control of the game’s rhythm. Ronaldo led the line, but the pressure of the occasion was shared by every player in yellow.
But title races rarely reward comfort. The longer the match stayed at 1-0, the more dangerous it became for Al-Nassr. Al-Hilal did not need many chances to stay alive, only belief and one moment of chaos.

That moment arrived deep into stoppage time when Bento’s own goal in the 98th minute rescued Al-Hilal and ripped the title party out of Al-Nassr’s hands. What had been a controlled finish became an emotional collapse in the final seconds.
Ronaldo was forced to see his team conceding the goal in dying moments of the game, after his 83rd minute substitution.
The result matters far beyond one derby night because of who Ronaldo is and what this title would mean. This is the league trophy Ronaldo has been chasing since leaving Juventus, and it would be his first league title in Saudi Arabia if Al-Nassr finish the job.
He arrived in the Saudi Pro League with huge expectation, global attention, and the kind of pressure only he can attract. The goals have come, the spotlight has never left, but the league crown has still remained just out of reach.
Ronaldo has won everything from league titles to Champions Leagues across Europe, yet there is always a different kind of pressure when a new chapter begins late in a career.

A league title in Saudi Arabia would not simply be another medal. It would be proof that even after leaving Juventus, and even in the later stage of his career, he can still shape a championship race in a new setting.
Al-Nassr still sit in a strong position, and that is the part their supporters will cling to. According to the standings, they remain top of the table on 83 points from 33 matches, while Al-Hilal are second on 78 points from 32 matches.
The gap is still in Al-Nassr’s favour, but the title is not mathematically finished, and the pressure now shifts to the remaining fixtures. One more slip would keep the door open.
That is where the drama becomes even more interesting. Al-Hilal still have games in hand, which means this draw was not just about the points lost by Al-Nassr, it was about the momentum Al-Hilal gained by refusing to accept defeat.
For Al-Nassr, the frustration is obvious. They had the lead, they had the title within reach, and they had done the hard work needed to put themselves in control.
Simakan’s goal looked like the strike that could decide the championship, but football has a way of punishing any sign of premature celebration.
The late own goal was a reminder that a single lapse can undo almost everything. In a race this tight, concentration has to last until the final whistle, and then some.
What remains now is a title race that still belongs to Al-Nassr, but not yet a title that belongs to them. They are close enough to taste it, yet far enough away to feel the tension growing with every passing match.
Ronaldo has spent his career turning pressure into silverware, but many argue things have not gone according to the plan for the Portuguese international.
This time, he will have to do it one more time, and the next match could decide whether the wait ends in celebration or stretches on a little longer.
