Ronaldo reaches another landmark THE KING, THE PRINCE. . . Cristiano Ronaldo (left) and Kylian Mbappe, walk to the dressing rooms after swapping their jerseys at the end of Portugal’s 2-2 draw against France in Budapest, Hungary, on Wednesday night — Agencies

LONDON. — Cristiano Ronaldo reached another famous landmark as his two penalties in Portugal’s 2-2 draw with France on Wednesday night took him to 109 international goals.

It’s a joint world record for men’s football.

Ali Daei, who scored 109 goals for Iran between 1993 and 2006, and Ronaldo are the only two male players to score 90 or more international goals.

This is the latest landmark to push the argument for the 36-year-old to be considered an all-time great.

He is already the top scorer in club football’s top tournament, the European Cup/Champions League, a trophy he has won five times.

Against France he became the top European scorer in World Cups and European Championships combined, overtaking Miroslav Klose’s record of 19.

He also became the top scorer in European Championship history against Hungary on June 15 and his tally is up to 13 now.

Almost half of Ronaldo’s goals have come in the final 30 minutes of games.

He has netted 31 times in the final 15 minutes and 22 times between the 61st and 75th minute.

Ronaldo has scored 17 times between minutes 16-30 and 16 times between 31-45, with 11 in the opening 15 minutes of the first half and 12 in the opening 15 minutes of the second half.

Some 89 of his goals have been inside the box with 20 from outside. He has scored 14 penalties and nine free-kicks.

Lithuania and Sweden (seven each) are the sides he has scored the most against. He had not scored against France before Wednesday’s game in Budapest.

There is no official database for top men’s international goalscorers which makes it hard to say exactly who ranks there.

Daei and Ronaldo are top on 109 goals each, of that there is no doubt.

Iran’s Daei, who played for Bayern Munich, is said to have broken Hungarian legend Ferenc Puskas’ record in 2003 with his 85th international goal. That is the year Ronaldo made his international debut — and the Ferenc Puskas Arena in Budapest was where he equalled the record.

Cynics could argue that Daei’s goals were against easier opposition — with 95 against fellow Asian sides.

He scored eight against the Maldives and Laos and six against Lebanon.

But Ronaldo has also benefitted from facing weaker nations including six against Andorra and Luxembourg each.

The only question is who ranks below them. Mokhtar Dahari of Malaysia (who played in the 1970s and 80s) is credited as being third in some places with 89 goals – but that figure is unverified.

Puskas is definitely next, with 84 goals in 85 caps for Hungary. He was the top scoring European before Ronaldo.

Zambia’s Godfrey Chitalu scored 79 goals between the 1960s and 1980s – although again that figure is not certified.

Ronaldo is unlikely to beat the world record, including women’s football, of Canada striker Christine Sinclair. She has scored 186 goals in 299 caps and has not yet retired. — BBC Sport.

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