<p>With or without Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal remain one of the most impressive teams in Europe as they showed once again with their 3-0 Nations League win over Sweden on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Sweden have made a habit of knocking teams such as Portugal out of their stride with their aggressive, physical style but the European champions refused to be bullied, even without their talismanic all-time record scorer.</p>.<p>The 35-year-old was ruled out of the match on Tuesday after testing positive for <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid-19</a> and flew back to Italy, where he plays for Juventus, before Wednesday's game to sit out at least 10 days in quarantine.</p>.<p>Ronaldo also missed the match at home to Croatia last month due to a toe infection -- but Portugal also won that one 4-1.</p>.<p>In fact, there have often been murmurs that Portugal look a better, more coherent side without Ronaldo, whose presence can be overbearing for younger players.</p>.<p>Two years ago, he sat out of the Nations League qualifying stage altogether to concentrate on his club football and Portugal cruised through their group without losing.</p>.<p>When he returned for the Final Four last year, Portugal won that as well, with Ronaldo scoring a hat-trick in their 3-1 semi-final win over Switzerland.</p>.<p>With a seemingly endless production line churning out talented players and a wily, down-to-earth coach in Fernando Santos, Portugal are always going to be a threat.</p>.<p>"Portugal have played well (without Ronaldo) plenty of times already," said Santos who, has lost only three competitive games since taking over six years ago.</p>.<p>"We are certainly not better without him, but the team still have the capability, quality and strategy to face any opponents."</p>.<p>On Wednesday, it was Diogo Jota's turn to shine. Selected as Ronaldo's replacement, the 23-year-old set up the first goal for Bernardo Silva and scored the other goals himself.</p>.<p>But Portugal were impressive all-round. Rui Patricio was unflappable in goal and the central defensive pairing of Pepe and Ruben Dias also looked solid.</p>.<p>Best of all, maybe, was the midfield pairing of Danilo and the remarkably dependable William Carvalho, who is back in the team after a series of nagging injuries.</p>.<p>"We managed to make things easier for ourselves," said Angola-born Carvalho.</p>.<p>"It wasn't in response to Ronaldo's absence -- he's the best player in the world and his absence is always felt. But we performed well without Cristiano and that was our aim."</p>
<p>With or without Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal remain one of the most impressive teams in Europe as they showed once again with their 3-0 Nations League win over Sweden on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Sweden have made a habit of knocking teams such as Portugal out of their stride with their aggressive, physical style but the European champions refused to be bullied, even without their talismanic all-time record scorer.</p>.<p>The 35-year-old was ruled out of the match on Tuesday after testing positive for <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid-19</a> and flew back to Italy, where he plays for Juventus, before Wednesday's game to sit out at least 10 days in quarantine.</p>.<p>Ronaldo also missed the match at home to Croatia last month due to a toe infection -- but Portugal also won that one 4-1.</p>.<p>In fact, there have often been murmurs that Portugal look a better, more coherent side without Ronaldo, whose presence can be overbearing for younger players.</p>.<p>Two years ago, he sat out of the Nations League qualifying stage altogether to concentrate on his club football and Portugal cruised through their group without losing.</p>.<p>When he returned for the Final Four last year, Portugal won that as well, with Ronaldo scoring a hat-trick in their 3-1 semi-final win over Switzerland.</p>.<p>With a seemingly endless production line churning out talented players and a wily, down-to-earth coach in Fernando Santos, Portugal are always going to be a threat.</p>.<p>"Portugal have played well (without Ronaldo) plenty of times already," said Santos who, has lost only three competitive games since taking over six years ago.</p>.<p>"We are certainly not better without him, but the team still have the capability, quality and strategy to face any opponents."</p>.<p>On Wednesday, it was Diogo Jota's turn to shine. Selected as Ronaldo's replacement, the 23-year-old set up the first goal for Bernardo Silva and scored the other goals himself.</p>.<p>But Portugal were impressive all-round. Rui Patricio was unflappable in goal and the central defensive pairing of Pepe and Ruben Dias also looked solid.</p>.<p>Best of all, maybe, was the midfield pairing of Danilo and the remarkably dependable William Carvalho, who is back in the team after a series of nagging injuries.</p>.<p>"We managed to make things easier for ourselves," said Angola-born Carvalho.</p>.<p>"It wasn't in response to Ronaldo's absence -- he's the best player in the world and his absence is always felt. But we performed well without Cristiano and that was our aim."</p>