Portugal vs Ireland: World Cup qualifier – teams, start, lineups

Who: Portugal vs Republic of Ireland
What: UEFA World Cup qualifier
Where: Estadio Jose Alvalade in Lisbon, Portugal
When: Saturday, October 11, at 7:45pm (18:45 GMT)

Portugal will seek to strengthen their grip on Group F in their UEFA World Cup qualifying campaign when they face the winless Republic of Ireland in Lisbon on Saturday.

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The Portuguese stormed to the UEFA Nations League title earlier this year and are part of the group of football teams that have belatedly joined the qualifiers for the FIFA 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at the match that could put one foot in next year’s final for Portugal, while it’s a must-win for the Irish.

How have Portugal fared in their World Cup qualifiers so far?

Portugal have won both their opening qualifiers in Group F, winning 5-0 in Armenia in their first match and 3-2 in Hungary in their second game.

How have Ireland fared in their World Cup qualifiers so far?

Ireland came from two behind in Dublin to draw 2-2 in their opening Group F match against 10-man Hungary. Adam Idah scored the leveller in the 90th minute. The Irish fell two behind once again in their second match, away to Armenia, but Evan Ferguson’s 57th-minute strike did not set up another comeback on this occasion, with the hosts holding on for a 2-1 win.

Why have Portugal and Ireland only recently joined the World Cup qualifying process?

Portugal and Ireland, along with 22 other teams, are only joining the qualifying programme for the World Cup now due to the progress of some of the top seeds in the 2025 Nations League, which culminated in June.

Portugal were crowned champions as they beat Spain 5-3 on penalties in the 2025 final.

Portugal beat Germany in the semifinal, while Spain overcame France. The rest of the qualifiers for the latter stages of that tournament are also only entering the World Cup qualifiers now.

What happened the last time Portugal played Ireland?

Portugal beat Ireland 3-0 in a friendly match in June 2024 in the last meeting between the sides.

Joao Felix gave the Portuguese the lead in the first half of the match in Aveiro, before Cristiano Ronaldo bagged a brace to seal the win.

The last competitive meeting between the sides was in a World Cup qualifier in 2021, which ended in a 0-0 draw in Ireland. Portugal won the reverse fixture 3-1, aiding their qualification for the Qatar 2022 World Cup. Ireland failed to qualify.

Roberto Martinez says Cristiano Ronaldo has lost none of his hunger

“Normally, when a player wins or achieves something, the next morning they don’t have the same hunger. But I haven’t seen that with Cristiano Ronaldo,” Martinez said ahead of the Ireland match.

“With him, the next morning is an opportunity to become better and win again. This is unique. I cannot explain it.

“He’s had a 20-year career. He’s not the same player as he was before, but he always finds a way to be useful. And he’s an example to the others. His love of playing football and the national team is there for all to see. He has played more than 200 games and continues to set an example. He will be remembered forever.

On the qualification process, Martinez added: “The national team’s focus is on trying to qualify. We continue step by step. The training camp in September was very good, but we can’t lose what we did in September. Our focus is on trying to be at the best level against Ireland.”

Ireland need ‘almost perfect game’ against Portugal

“We know that we need to have almost a perfect game to get something from this match,” Heimir Hallgrimsson, the Republic of Ireland coach, said.

“If we do, we have a chance to steal a point or to win the game. Obviously, we need to try to keep a clean sheet. That’s always going to make it easier.

“We have a game plan that we think is going to work. We’ll see if that materialises. But obviously, if you look at the table, we need at least a minimum three points from this camp. And for obvious reasons, it’s probably the Armenia game that everybody is saying: ‘OK, we can have a good performance and a better performance than in Armenia and get three points there.’”

Head-to-head

This is only the 17th meeting between the European sides, with Portugal winning nine and Ireland winning four.

Ireland’s last win in the fixture came in a friendly between the sides in 2005, courtesy of Andy O’Brien’s solitary strike in Dublin. There have been four subsequent matches, of which Portugal have won three.

Ireland’s last competitive win against Portugal came in a European Championships qualifier in 1995.

The fixture dates back to 1946 and began with a 3-1 home win for Portugal in a friendly.

Portugal form

W-W-W-W-W

Republic of Ireland form

W-D-D-D-L

Portugal team news

Midfielder Joao Neves and defender Joao Cancelo are both absent due to hamstring injuries.

Republic of Ireland team news

The Irish have been hit by an extensive injury list, including Matt Doherty, Jason Knight, Bosun Lawal, Callum O’Dowda and Sammie Szmodics

Striker Troy Parrott made a substitute appearance in a match with  AZ Alkmaar at the weekend, and returns to the Ireland squad, having missed the last two internationals due to injury.

Portugal predicted starting lineup

Costa; Dalot, Dias, Inacio, Mendes; Bernardo, Vitinha, Fernandes; Conceicao, Ronaldo, Neto

Republic of Ireland possible starting lineup

UK, France, Germany say they hope to restart Iran nuclear talks

The United Kingdom, France and Germany have said they wish to restart stalled nuclear talks with Iran and the United States, more than a month after the three European countries triggered a mechanism reinstating the United Nations sanctions on Iran for the first time in a decade.

The E3 countries’ joint statement on Friday came nearly two weeks after UN sanctions were reimposed on Iran, under a “snapback” process that the three nations had initiated on August 28 and that became effective one month later.

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In response, Iran recalled its envoys to the three European countries for consultations.

Iran has said that, following those revived sanctions, it would not immediately resume nuclear talks.

The sanctions set up a global ban on cooperation with Iran on nuclear, military, banking and shipping industries.

The sanctions are aimed at imposing new economic pain to pressure Iran, but it remains to be seen if all countries will enforce them. On September 27, the day before the sanctions came into effect, Iran’s national currency, the rial, fell to new all-time lows.

In their joint statement, the UK, France and Germany said: “We are determined to reinitiate negotiations with Iran and the United States towards a comprehensive, durable and verifiable agreement that ensures Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon.”

A spokesman for the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Esmaeil Baghaei, said on Monday that “we have no plans for negotiations at this stage”.

He added that Iran was examining the “consequences and implications” of the restart of sanctions.

“Of course, diplomacy – in the sense of maintaining contacts and consultations – will continue,” Baghaei said. “Whenever we feel that diplomacy can be effective, we will certainly make decisions based on the country’s interests and priorities.”

Nuclear fears

Western countries, spearheaded by the US and joined by Israel, accuse Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons – a charge Tehran has long denied.

During a 12-day June conflict, the US bombed nuclear sites in Iran, joining an Israeli air campaign that targeted Iran’s top generals and nuclear scientists, as well as civilians in residential areas. Iran retaliated with barrages of missiles and drones against Israel and sites linked to the US. According to Amnesty International, Israeli attacks on Iran killed at least 1,100 people.

The E3 said in Friday’s statement that “it was right that the snapback mechanism had been triggered”.

“Iran’s nuclear programme poses a serious threat to global peace and security,” the bloc of nations added.

In 2015, the US, along with the E3, Russia and China, concluded an agreement with Iran providing for the regulation of Iranian nuclear activities in exchange for the lifting of sanctions.

US President Donald Trump decided during his first term in 2018 to withdraw the US from the deal and to reinstate US sanctions.

In retaliation, Iran pulled back from some of its commitments, particularly on uranium enrichment.

France’s Macron re-appoints Sebastien Lecornu as prime minister

France’s President Emmanuel Macron has reappointed Sebastien Lecornu as prime minister.

Lecornu, who had stepped down from the same post on Monday, just weeks after taking office, is returning in a surprise move after days of negotiations aimed at ending a political impasse in the country.

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Lecornu is tasked with forming a new cabinet, Macron’s office said in a statement on Friday.

“I accept – out of duty – the mission entrusted to me by the President of the Republic to do everything possible to provide France with a budget by the end of the year and to address the daily life issues of our fellow citizens,” Lecornu wrote on X.

“We must put an end to this political crisis that exasperates the French people and to this instability that is harmful to France’s image and its interests.”

Speaking shortly after the appointment was announced, Al Jazeera’s Natacha Butler, reporting from Paris, said that “everything has been so unpredictable that nobody knew what to expect”.

“This is just the latest twist in what has been a dramatic week in French politics.”

Macron had met with leaders of all political parties apart from the far-right National Rally (RN) and the far-left France Unbowed party earlier on Friday at the presidential palace, informed sources told the AFP news agency.

Shortly before the meeting, the presidency in a statement called on all parties to recognise the “moment of collective responsibility”, appearing to imply that Macron could dissolve the French Parliament if they did not rally behind his preferred candidate.

Lecornu’s reappointment demonstrates that “clearly Macron has run out of options”, said Butler.

Following the meeting, “we heard party leaders … saying that they felt Emmanuel Macron was disconnected from what they wanted to put across on the agenda, that he didn’t understand their concerns and they felt ignored, as if the meetings had made the situation even worse,” Al Jazeera’s correspondent added.

First appointed a month ago, Lecornu, 39, had come under increasing pressure in recent weeks as he struggled to pass a budget through the fractured French Parliament amid a debt crisis.

In naming Lecornu, Macron, 47, risks the wrath of his political rivals, who have argued that the best way out of the country’s deepest political crisis in decades was for Macron to either hold snap parliamentary elections or resign.

Trump announces layoffs amid government shutdown, despite legal questions

The administration of United States President Donald Trump has announced that it started laying off federal employees as the government shutdown grinds on, despite questions about Trump’s legal authority to do so.

In a terse statement on Friday, US Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought said that the government was moving forward with “reduction-in-force” plans or RIFs to slash the workforce.

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“RIFs have begun,” Vought wrote in a social media post.

Citing anonymous sources in the administration, the news outlet Politico reported that the agencies affected include the departments of the Interior, Homeland Security, Treasury, Environmental Protection Agency, Commerce, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services (HHS), and Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

Spokespersons at several of those departments, including the Treasury and HHS, have since confirmed that layoff notices have gone out to employees. In its notices, HHS referenced the “Democrat-led government shutdown”, mirroring the partisan framing of the administration.

“All HHS employees receiving reduction-in-force notices were designated non-essential by their respective divisions. HHS continues to close wasteful and duplicative entities, including those that are at odds with the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again agenda,” the department’s statement adds.

Friday marked the 10th day of the shutdown, with no end in sight. Earlier in the day, House Speaker Mike Johnson announced he intends to keep his chamber shuttered until the Senate acts on a continuing budget resolution that House Republicans had already passed.

The Senate has voted down the House resolution seven times since the start of the shutdown.

“We will come back here and get back to legislative session as soon as the Senate Democrats turn the lights back on. That’s the fact. That’s where we are,” Johnson told reporters.

Democrats, meanwhile, have argued that Republicans have refused to negotiate on healthcare priorities, including extending subsidies under the Affordable Care Act that are set to expire by year’s end.

Trump, a Republican, has been open about his intention to use the shutdown to inflict cuts on programmes he associates with the Democratic Party.

Already, since the shutdown started on October 1, Vought announced nearly $18bn in cuts to New York City infrastructure projects, $2bn in cuts for Chicago’s transportation system, and $8bn in cuts related to climate change, destined to affect 16 largely Democratic states.

“We’re only cutting Democrat programmes, I hate to tell you, but we are cutting Democrat programmes,” the president said during a Cabinet meeting earlier this week. “We will be cutting some very popular Democrat programmes that aren’t popular with Republicans, frankly.”

Democratic lawmakers, meanwhile, have accused the Trump administration of using the shutdown to continue its purge of government agencies and slash services, even though Trump’s legal authority to do so is contested. During government shutdowns, employees are typically furloughed but not fired from their jobs.

On Friday, a federal court in San Francisco held a hearing to weigh complaints from workers’ unions, including the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE).

Those unions have argued that laying off employees during a shutdown amounts to an “unlawful abuse of power”.

In a statement, AFGE President Everett Kelley argued that no other president has attempted to terminate furloughed government employees during a shutdown.

“It is disgraceful that the Trump administration has used the government shutdown as an excuse to illegally fire thousands of workers who provide critical services to communities across the country,” Kelley said, calling on Congress to break its impasse.

“These workers show up every day to serve the American people, and for the past nine months have been met with nothing but cruelty and viciousness from President Trump. Every single American citizen should be outraged.”

Trump, however, has long sought to slash what he has described as “waste” and “bloat” from the federal government. He has also advanced a vision of expanding presidential authority.

Gaza local authorities demand independent genocide probe as truce starts

The Gaza Government Media Office has called for establishing an international panel to investigate Israel’s atrocities in the territory and hold Israeli leaders accountable.

After the ceasefire deal came into effect on Friday, director of the office, Ismail al-Thawabta, issued a list of demands, including ensuring the reconstruction of Gaza after the war.

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“We call on the international community, the United Nations and all international legal organisations and the International Court of Justice to punish the leaders of the [Israeli] occupation and to not grant them any legal or political immunity,” al-Thawabta said in a statement.

“We call for forming an international, independent commission to investigate the war crimes and genocide and ensure that the return and compensation of all displaced people.”

Last year, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant over war crime charges in Gaza, including using starvation as a weapon of war.

But Netanyahu and Gallant remain free men, and with a few exceptions, countries across the world have maintained their diplomatic and trade ties to Israel despite the horrors in Gaza.

Israel has turned most of Gaza into rubble in a campaign that leading rights groups and UN investigators have described as a genocide.

Reporting from Nuseirat in central Gaza on Friday, Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said thousands of Palestinians are moving on foot to return to their homes in the north of the enclave.

“Most of those Palestinians are people who were forced to evacuate, forced to flee under the relentless bombardment, and now they’re going back home with smiles. They’re going back home happy,” Khoudary said.

“But they know they won’t find anything back home, where Israeli forces have been exploding and destroying complete residential neighbourhoods in the past couple of weeks.”

Before the ceasefire deal was reached, Israel was conducting a ground operation in Gaza City, a campaign that aimed to level what was left of the urban area.

The widespread destruction across Gaza has spurred an urgent need for construction material and equipment as well as temporary housing in the territory.

During a 60-day truce earlier this year, Israel blocked reconstruction material from entering Gaza before unilaterally restarting the war in March.

With Hamas set to release all Israeli captives in the coming days, some Palestinian rights advocates are concerned that Israel will use the lack of housing in Gaza to push residents out of the territory.

“We demand an urgent plan for the comprehensive reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, with Arab and international funding, according to a transparent mechanism that ensures that resources reach civilians,” al-Thawabta said on Friday.

He stressed that ending the war of extermination against Palestinians must be real and tangible, not just a formal declaration.

“It must end the siege, ensure accountability, and guarantee a dignified and safe life for our Palestinian people, who have endured two full years under bombardment, starvation, destruction and forced displacement,” al-Thawabta added.

As the war comes to a halt, the Gaza Government Media Office provided grim data from the territory after 735 days of horrific atrocities by Israel:

  • More than 67,000 Palestinians killed
  • Around 9,500 people missing
  • About 170,000 people injured
  • More than 20,000 children killed
  • More than 1,000 babies under the age of one killed
  • At least 12,500 women killed
  • At least 1,670 medics killed
  • 254 journalists killed
  • 90 percent of civilian infrastructure destroyed
  • Around 200,000 tonnes of explosives dropped on Gaza