Yoanne Wissa gives DR Congo first ever World Cup point in draw with Portugal

Yoanne Wissa gives DR Congo first ever World Cup point in draw with Portugal

Cristiano Ronaldo cuts a frustrated figure in opening game of his sixth World Cup

Cristiano Ronaldo during the Group K match between Portugal and DR Congo in Houston, Texas. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Getty Images

World Cup, Group K: Portugal 1 (Neves 6) DR Congo 1 (Wissa 45+4)

They came to see Cristiano Ronaldo, perhaps expecting feats to rival Lionel Messi’s remarkable display the night before. Ronaldo’s many followers in Houston did their best to summon a meaningful contribution from their idol, but ultimately there were 16 players infinitely more deserving of acclaim. The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) could have folded after falling behind to João Neves’s early goal but recovered brilliantly to salvage a historic draw on their return to the World Cup, Yoane Wissa’s leveller followed by a triumph of defensive discipline and resolve.

Roberto Martínez kept Ronaldo on the pitch for all 95 minutes but, beyond two half-chances midway through the second period, his contribution was minimal and did little to assuage concerns that his presence is a potentially crippling millstone.

Yoane Wissa celebrates scoring an equaliser for DR Congo. Photograph: Alex Slitz/Getty Images

The roar when Ronaldo first took possession as the clock struck two minutes, thrilling the masses with a sideways pass to João Cancelo, underlined who a giant swathe of those present had arrived to witness. Texans had embraced their dalliance with football celebrity even if the journey to the stadium, through part-flooded roads for anyone driving from downtown, proved a challenge amid torrential morning rain.

Fifa president Gianni Infantino, who had facilitated Ronaldo’s eligibility for this match by suspending the final two matches of a three-game ban, was among those to arrive on time. Soon enough the thousands in red shirts, an uncommonly high percentage decorated with the number seven, could rise to their feet again. Neves may not be a household name here, but his firmly planted header, after he reached Pedro Neto’s cross ahead of a leaden Axel Tuanzebe, left goalkeeper Lionel Mpassi standing as it zipped into his left corner.

It was exactly the start the DRC must have feared. Their backing here was restricted to small pockets of mostly expatriate fans, the 21-day Ebola-enforced quarantine imposed on visitors to the US from their homeland having proved prohibitive for most. Sébastien Desabre’s team had themselves been forced to prepare in a Belgium-based bubble before arriving in Houston, where they are based for the tournament and were warmly received last week.

They had barely left their own half when Neves scored but began to flicker, Wissa bobbling a shot wide and his strike partner Cédric Bakambu seeing a strike deflected away. Portugal were in enough of a game for Ronaldo to remonstrate heavily upon seeing Bernardo Silva booked, a resulting rebuke from the referee Abdulrahman Al-Jassim drawing boos when shown on the big screen.

Joao Neves scores Portugal's opening goal. Photograph: Lars Baron/Getty Images