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Brazilian footballer (born 1976)

Nazário and the second or paternal family name is de

Lima. In this Portuguese name , the 🛡 first or maternal family name isand the second or

paternal family name is

Ronaldo Luís Nazário de Lima (Brazilian Portuguese: [ʁoˈnawdu

🛡 ˈlwiz nɐˈzaɾju dʒi ˈlimɐ]; born 18 September 1976), known as Ronaldo or Ronaldo

Nazário, is a Brazilian former professional footballer 🛡 who played as a striker. He is

the owner of Brasileiro Série A club Cruzeiro and owner and president of 🛡 Segunda

Division club Real Valladolid. Nicknamed O Fenômeno ('The Phenomenon') and R9, he is

considered one of the greatest players 🛡 of all time. As a multi-functional striker who

brought a new dimension to the position, Ronaldo has been an influence 🛡 for a generation

of strikers that have followed. His individual accolades include being named FIFA World

Player of the Year 🛡 three times and winning two Ballon d'Or awards.

Ronaldo started his

career at Cruzeiro and moved to PSV in 1994. He 🛡 joined Barcelona in 1996 for a then

world record transfer fee and at 20 years old, he was named the 🛡 1996 FIFA World Player

of the Year, making him the youngest recipient of the award. In 1997, Inter Milan broke

🛡 the world record fee to sign Ronaldo, making him the first player since Diego Maradona

to break the world transfer 🛡 record twice. At 21, he received the 1997 Ballon d'Or and

remains the youngest recipient of the award. By the 🛡 age of 23, Ronaldo had scored over

200 goals for club and country. However, after a series of knee injuries 🛡 and

recuperation, he was inactive for almost three years. Ronaldo joined Real Madrid in

2002 and won the 2002–03 La 🛡 Liga title. He had spells at AC Milan and Corinthians

before retiring in 2011, having suffered further injuries.

Ronaldo played for 🛡 Brazil in

98 matches, scoring 62 goals and is the third-highest goalscorer for his national team.

At age 17, he 🛡 was the youngest member of the Brazilian squad that won the 1994 FIFA

World Cup. At the 1998 FIFA World 🛡 Cup, Ronaldo received the Golden Ball as the player

of the tournament after he helped Brazil reach the final, where 🛡 he suffered a

convulsive fit hours before kick-off. He won the 2002 FIFA World Cup, starring in a

front three 🛡 with Ronaldinho and Rivaldo. Ronaldo scored twice in the final and received

the Golden Boot as the tournament's top goalscorer. 🛡 This achievement, viewed as

"redemption" for what occurred at the previous World Cup, saw Ronaldo named the 2002

FIFA World 🛡 Player of the Year, receive the 2002 Ballon d'Or, and for his return from

injury, won the Laureus World Sports 🛡 Award for Comeback of the Year. At the 2006 FIFA

World Cup, Ronaldo scored his 15th World Cup goal, a 🛡 tournament record at the time. He

also won the 1997 Copa América, where he became the player of the tournament 🛡 and the

1999 Copa América, where he was the top goalscorer.

Ronaldo was one of the most

marketable sportsmen in the 🛡 world during his playing career. He was named in the FIFA

100 list of the greatest living players compiled in 🛡 2004 by Pelé and was inducted into

the Brazilian Football Museum Hall of Fame, Italian Football Hall of Fame, Inter 🛡 Milan

Hall of Fame and Real Madrid Hall of Fame. In 2024, Ronaldo was named in the Ballon

d'Or Dream 🛡 Team, a greatest all-time XI published by France Football magazine. Ronaldo

has continued his work as a United Nations Development 🛡 Programme Goodwill Ambassador, a

position to which he was appointed in 2000. Ronaldo became the majority owner of Real

Valladolid 🛡 in September 2024, after buying 51% of the club's shares. In December 2024,

he bought a controlling stake in his 🛡 boyhood club Cruzeiro, investingR$70 million in

the club.

Early life

Ronaldo Luís Nazário de Lima was born on 18 September 1976 in

🛡 Itaguaí as the third child of Nélio Nazário de Lima Snr. and Sônia dos Santos

Barata.[6][7] Ronaldo has a brother, 🛡 Nélio Jr.[7][8] His parents separated when he was

11, and Ronaldo dropped out of school shortly afterward to pursue a 🛡 career in

football.[9] He played on the streets of Bento Ribeiro, a suburb of Rio de Janeiro. His

mother states, 🛡 "I always found him on the street playing ball with friends when he

should have been in school. I know, 🛡 I lost my battle."[9] He joined the Social Ramos

futsal team at the age of 12 and led the city's 🛡 youth league in scoring with a record

166 goals in his first season which included scoring 11 of his team's 🛡 12 goals in a

single game.[7][9] Crediting futsal for developing his skills, Ronaldo has said,

"futsal will always be my 🛡 first love."[10][11][12] His coach from Social Ramos, Alirio

Carvalho, says: "What was special about Ronaldo was his attitude. It was 🛡 as if he had

come from the moon. Nothing disturbed him, nothing overawed him, nothing threw him off

his game."[13]

Spotted 🛡 by former Brazilian player Jairzinho, who was coaching São

Cristóvão, Ronaldo played for the São Cristóvão youth team.[14] Under the 🛡 guidance of

coach Alfredo Sampaio, he progressed quickly through the ranks, playing for the clubs'

under-17 and under-20 teams while 🛡 only 15.[13] Ronaldo's agents in Brazil, Reinaldo

Pitta and Alexandre Martins, signed him as a 13-year-old. Pitta stated, "We saw 🛡 right

away that he could be something different than most other players."[9] Recognized as a

child prodigy, Jairzinho recommended the 🛡 then 16-year-old to his former club

Cruzeiro.[15]

Club career

Cruzeiro

Ronaldo quickly attracted attention from big clubs,

and his agents rejected offers from 🛡 Botafogo and São Paulo. He was turned down by

Flamengo, the team he supported as a boy, after missing practice 🛡 due to an inability to

afford the fare for the hour-long bus ride.[9][16] Jairzinho saw Ronaldo's potential

and helped get 🛡 him a move to Cruzeiro.[9] Ronaldo's agents accepted an offer of €50,000

from the club, and he scored four goals 🛡 on his youth team debut.[13]

Three months after

arriving at Cruzeiro, Ronaldo made his professional debut on 25 May 1993 against

🛡 Caldense in the Minas Gerais State Championship.[13][17] He came to national public

attention on 7 November 1993, scoring five goals 🛡 in the game against Bahia.[18] His

first senior goal came in a friendly during a tour of Portugal, scoring a 🛡 goal against

Belenenses and generally impressing new coach Carlos Alberto Silva, enough to become a

first team regular.[13] During the 🛡 tour, his performance against Porto impressed enough

that they bidR$500,000, which was turned down by club president César Masci.[13] Upon

🛡 returning from the tour, he scored 20 goals, with eight coming in the Supercopa

Libertadores, including a hat-trick against Chilean 🛡 side Colo-Colo in the first leg,

and two in the second leg, before scoring a further three against Uruguayan team

🛡 Nacional, resulting in him being the tournament's top goalscorer.[13] Ronaldo scored 44

goals in 47 games with Cruzeiro, leading them 🛡 to their first Copa do Brasil in 1993,

and the Minas Gerais State Championship in 1994.[19]

PSV

Ronaldo joined PSV after the

🛡 1994 World Cup. He was selected for the tournament despite being just 17, but did not

play in any games. 🛡 His Brazil teammate Romário having played for PSV from 1988 to 1993

advised Ronaldo to move to the club.[20][21] On 🛡 28 August 1994, Ronaldo scored ten

minutes into his debut against Vitesse, and scored a brace on his home debut 🛡 against Go

Ahead Eagles.[21] He scored 30 league goals in his first season in the Netherlands,

which included seven braces 🛡 and a hat-trick against Utrecht.[21] After scoring a

hat-trick in PSV's game against Bayer Leverkusen in the 1994–95 UEFA Cup, 🛡 Leverkusen

striker and Germany World Cup winner Rudi Völler stated in a post match press

conference, "Never in my life 🛡 have I seen an 18-year-old play in this way."[20] His

dribbles from midfield caught the attention of many in the 🛡 sport, with future Barcelona

teammate Luis Enrique stating, "I'd seen him on television at PSV and thought ‘wow'.

Then he 🛡 came to Barcelona. He's the most spectacular player I've ever seen. He did

things I'd never seen before. We're now 🛡 used to seeing Messi dribble past six players,

but not then. Ronaldo was a beast."[22]

Nick Miller, match reporter for The 🛡 Guardian,

writes, "What's striking about Ronaldo in that first year at PSV is how complete he

looks, even as a 🛡 skinny teenager. Everything that would come to define him – the

lightning pace, the blurry stepovers, the implausible impression that 🛡 he was faster

with the ball than without it, even the exceptional upper-body strength – was all

there."[20] Rob Smyth 🛡 added, "In many ways Ronaldo was the first PlayStation

footballer. His stepover was a form of hypnosis, and his signature 🛡 trick, the elastico,

could certainly have come from a computer screen."[23] Ronaldo's second season was

marred by a knee injury 🛡 which kept him out of most of the campaign, but he still

averaged nearly a goal a game, scoring 19 🛡 goals in 21 appearances,[20] including a UEFA

Cup four-goal haul against Finnish side MyPa.[21] With PSV, Ronaldo won the Dutch 🛡 Cup

in 1996 and he was Eredivisie top scorer in 1995.[24] In his two seasons at the club he

scored 🛡 54 goals in 58 games.[25]

Barcelona

During his spell at PSV, Ronaldo attracted

the attention of both Inter Milan and FC Barcelona. 🛡 It was Barcelona that was willing

to pay the then world record fee ofR$19.5 million, and he joined the club 🛡 on 17 July

1996.[25] According to manager Bobby Robson, he signed an eight-year contract, and

would play up front alone.[26]

During 🛡 the 1996–97 season, Ronaldo scored 47 goals in 49

games in all competitions, with his goal celebration invariably the same 🛡 with his arms

outstretched like the statue of Christ the Redeemer that watches over his native Rio de

Janeiro.[25] He 🛡 helped Barcelona to the 1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup title, capping

the season with the winning goal in the final, 🛡 and to a win in the 1996 Supercopa de

España.[27] He also won La Liga top scorer award in 1997 🛡 with 34 goals in 37 games, and

the European Golden Shoe.[28] Until the 2008–09 season, Ronaldo remained the last

player 🛡 to score more than 30 goals in La Liga.[28]

Ronaldo was at his physical peak at

Barcelona, and many of his 🛡 47 goals involved him rounding the goalkeeper before

slotting the ball into the net.[25] By January 1997, at 20 years 🛡 old, he was touted to

be the next "great" in football, being viewed as the heir to Pelé, Diego Maradona,

🛡 Johan Cruyff[29] and Marco van Basten.[30] Speaking to The New York Times regarding

Ronaldo later that season, Robson said "I 🛡 don't think I've ever seen a player at 20

have so much".[31] World Soccer magazine featured Ronaldo on its cover 🛡 in the same year

under the headline 'The Best Ever?'.[30] Óscar García, Ronaldo's teammate that season,

stated, "Back then, he 🛡 was all fibre and muscle. He was a perfect physical specimen.

Such incredible power matched to his technical skills could 🛡 make him unstoppable."[32]

José Mourinho, who worked as an interpreter at Barcelona, referred to Ronaldo as "the

greatest player I 🛡 have ever seen in my life", adding, "I have no doubts. Ronaldo is the

best my eyes have seen",[33] and 🛡 in 2014 regarded him as the best player post-Diego

Maradona.[34]

Arguably Ronaldo's most memorable Barcelona goal was scored at SD

Compostela 🛡 on 11 October 1996; having received the ball inside his own half, he evaded

a cynical tackle of the first 🛡 opponent with a drag back, before running away from

another and ran towards goal, going past two more defenders in 🛡 the box with close ball

control, before finishing into the bottom corner of the net.[25] The camera then cut to

🛡 manager Robson who had got up off the bench and clasped his head in disbelief at what

he had seen.[25] 🛡 The footage of the goal was later used in a Nike advert with a

voiceover asking: "Imagine you asked God 🛡 to be the best player in the world, and he

listened to you",[25] and the goal was said to have 🛡 been replayed 160 times on the main

Spanish television channels in the 48 hours following the game.[31] Half-way through

the 🛡 season, Barcelona agreed in principle to extend his contract to 2006, doubling his

salary in the process.[31] A hat-trick against 🛡 Valencia, the third goal of which saw

him dissect two Valencia defenders before striking the ball into the net, saw 🛡 Barcelona

fans waving white handkerchiefs as an expression of admiration for an exceptional

performance. Sid Lowe of Sports Illustrated states, 🛡 "That season Ronaldo was

unstoppable. He was slim and powerful, skillful, fast and deadly. He was ridiculously

good."[35] At the 🛡 end of 1996, aged 20, Ronaldo became the youngest player to win FIFA

World Player of the Year.[25]

Inter Milan

1997–1999: World 🛡 record transfer and Ballon

d'Or win

Ronaldo's time at Barcelona lasted one season, as there were problems with the

renegotiation of 🛡 his contract.[25] Barcelona thought there was an agreement in place,

with Barcelona president Josep Lluís Núñez saying "He's ours for 🛡 life", but when the

parties reconvened the following day, the agreement collapsed, with Núñez admitting:

"It's all over, Ronaldo is 🛡 going".[25] Speaking to ESPN, Ronaldo stated, "I had reached

an agreement to renew my contract just a month before that 🛡 season finished, but a week

later the lawyer and the president of Barcelona agreed that that contract was

absurd."[36] Paying 🛡 the buy out clause fee in his contract, Inter Milan signed him in

the summer of 1997 for a then 🛡 world record fee ofR$27 million,[37] making him the

second player, after Diego Maradona, to break the world transfer record twice.[23][25]

🛡 He signed a five-year contract with the Italians,[38] and was unveiled to 4000 Inter

fans at their training ground.[39] His 🛡 debut came on 27 July during the pre-season

fixture against Manchester United.[39][40] His competitive debut came on the opening

day 🛡 of the 1997–98 season against Brescia.[41]

Ronaldo adapted to the Italian style of

the game in his first season, finishing with 🛡 25 Serie A goals, and was named Serie A

Footballer of the Year.[42] Ronaldo started to develop into a complete 🛡 forward. He

began racking up assists, became first-choice penalty taker, taking and scoring

freekicks. Halfway through his first season he 🛡 won FIFA World Player of the Year for

the second time, and collected the Ballon d'Or.[43] During his time with 🛡 Inter, he

scored several goals against city rivals AC Milan in the Derby della Madonnina. Ronaldo

and prolific Fiorentina striker 🛡 Gabriel Batistuta were the two best strikers in Serie

A, with their duels the most anticipated in Italy.[44] Ronaldo's goal 🛡 celebrations

often saw his Inter teammates congratulating him by kneeling down and pretending to

shine his shoe.[45] Ronaldo scored a 🛡 trademark goal against Lazio in the 1998 UEFA Cup

Final. Running through defence to go one on one with Lazio 🛡 goalkeeper Luca Marchegiani,

Ronaldo feinted to go right then left, without touching the ball, leaving Marchegiani

on his backside, before 🛡 going right and slotting the ball into the net.[46] His Inter

teammate Youri Djorkaeff stated; "Ronaldo was phenomenal. He proved 🛡 that he was a cut

above the rest that season."[46] After the 1998 FIFA World Cup, where he was named

🛡 player of the tournament, Ronaldo was widely regarded as the best striker in the

world.[23][47] By the end of the 🛡 1998–99 season, he was appointed Inter Milan

captain.[48]

1999–2002: Recurring injury problems

"The knee injuries suffered at Inter

Milan took away the 🛡 explosiveness that made him possibly the greatest young footballer

of all time, a futuristic fusion of speed, strength and skill. 🛡 That is not to belittle

Ronaldo's achievements in the second half of his career, when he scored eight goals in

🛡 a single World Cup [in 2002] and became the first Ronaldo to receive a standing ovation

at Old Trafford [in 🛡 2003], but it is the memory of the early years that puts mist in

the eyes of grown men." —Rob 🛡 Smyth, The Guardian.[23]

After two seasons with Inter, A.

C. Milan defender Paolo Maldini viewed Ronaldo and Diego Maradona as the 🛡 two best

players he ever faced, stating, "Ronaldo during his first two years at Inter was a

phenomenon."[49] Inter had 🛡 high hopes going into the 1999–2000 season with their attack

including Ronaldo and Italian stars Roberto Baggio and Christian Vieri.[50] 🛡 However, on

21 November, during a Serie A match against Lecce, Ronaldo felt his knee buckle and was

forced to 🛡 limp off the field.[51] A medical examination confirmed that the striker had

ruptured a tendon in his knee and would 🛡 require surgery.[51] During his first comeback

on 12 April 2000, he played only six minutes during the first leg of 🛡 the Coppa Italia

final against Lazio before suffering a complete rupture of the knee-cap

tendons.[52][53] Ronaldo's physiotherapist Nilton Petrone stated, 🛡 "his knee-cap

actually exploded", and called it "the worst football injury" he's ever

seen.[54]

Ronaldo was forced to miss the entire 🛡 2000–01 season and much of the two

seasons either side of it.[55] Since his Inter teammate Javier Zanetti had replaced 🛡 him

as the team captain during his absence, he eventually inherited the captain's armband

in late 2001.[56] After two operations 🛡 and rehabilitation, Ronaldo came back for the

2002 World Cup, helping Brazil win their fifth World Cup title. Later in 🛡 2002, he won

the FIFA World Player of the Year award for the third time, and transferred from Inter

to 🛡 Real Madrid.[43] Ronaldo was given his most recognizable nickname, Il Fenomeno, by

the Italian press while playing there.[9][23] His Inter 🛡 teammate Djorkaeff stated,

"when we were training, we would practically stop to watch him. It was

extraordinary."[57] Prior to his 🛡 November 1999 injury Ronaldo had registered 42 goals

in 58 Serie A games, in what was the hardest league to 🛡 score in with the most advanced

defensive strategies and the world's best defenders.[58][59] After five years he had

played 99 🛡 games and scored 59 goals for Nerazzurri.[43] Ronaldo's performances at the

club – especially the first two seasons before injury 🛡 – saw him named among the four

inaugural inductees into the Inter Milan Hall of Fame in 2024.[60][61]

Real

Madrid

2002–2005: Ballon 🛡 d'Or win and La Liga championship

Ronaldo won La Liga in his

first season and received the Pichichi Trophy in his 🛡 second.

Having signed for Real

Madrid for €46 million, his jersey sales broke all records on the first day.[62]

Ronaldo was 🛡 part of the Galácticos era of global stars signed by the club every summer,

which included Zinedine Zidane, Luís Figo, 🛡 Roberto Carlos and David Beckham.[63] He was

sidelined through injury until October 2002 which added to the fans anticipation.[64]

Ronaldo 🛡 scored twice on his debut against Alavés, the first 61 seconds after coming

on.[64] That same reception was observed at 🛡 the final game of the season against

Athletic Bilbao, where Ronaldo scored to finish his first season with 23 league 🛡 goals

and seal La Liga title for 2003.[65] He also won an Intercontinental Cup in 2002 and

Supercopa de España 🛡 in 2003, scoring in both finals.[65]

In the second leg of Real

Madrid's Champions League quarter-final, Ronaldo scored a hat-trick against 🛡 Manchester

United at Old Trafford, knocking the English team out of the competition.[66]

Completing his hat-trick with a swerving strike 🛡 from 30 yards, Ronaldo was substituted

off after 67 minutes, and was given a standing ovation from both sets of 🛡 fans.[67][66]

Reflecting on the ovation given to him from the oppositions' fans, Ronaldo stated that

"it remains a very beautiful, 🛡 very special moment".[68] Manchester United defender Wes

Brown commented, "He was just unstoppable. A young Ronaldo [before a series of

🛡 injuries] would have been even more dangerous, but it shows how good a player he was.

Whenever he wanted to 🛡 turn it on he could, on any stage, in any stadium".[67] Ronaldo

scored in a 2–1 home win over Juventus 🛡 in the first leg of the Champions League

semi-finals, but injury crucially kept him out of most of the second 🛡 leg defeat where

Real were eliminated.[69]

In the 2003–04 season, Madrid were on track to win the

treble, until Ronaldo was 🛡 injured towards the end of the season; they subsequently lost

the Copa del Rey final, were knocked out of the 🛡 UEFA Champions League quarter-finals to

AS Monaco, and suffered a league form breakdown.[70][71] During that second season at

the club, 🛡 Ronaldo scored one of the fastest goals in the club's history when he netted

after 15 seconds in a league 🛡 match against Atlético Madrid at the Bernabéu on 3

December 2003.[72] Three days later he helped to ensure Real's first 🛡 league victory

over Barcelona at the Nou Camp in 20 years when he scored the second goal in a 2–1

🛡 victory over his former club.[69] He finished the season as La Liga's top scorer with

25 goals and received the 🛡 Pichichi Trophy for a second time, despite Madrid losing the

league title to Valencia.[28]

2005–2007: Final two seasons

Ronaldo taking a shot 🛡 for

Real Madrid in 2005

In his final two seasons at Real Madrid, Ronaldo missed a number of

games with injuries 🛡 and weight issues, and with the acquisition of Ruud van Nistelrooy

in 2006, he grew further out of favour with 🛡 the manager Fabio Capello.[73] Speaking in

2024 on Ronaldo's weight issues and lack of fitness at Madrid, in addition to 🛡 his

ability, Capello summed up the conflicting emotions he has with the Brazilian, "the

most difficult player to handle was 🛡 the best I coached: Ronaldo, il Fenomeno."[74]

In

four and a half seasons at the club, Ronaldo scored over a century 🛡 of goals, becoming

the fifth foreigner at Madrid to achieve the feat after Argentine Alfredo Di Stéfano,

Hungarian Ferenc Puskás, 🛡 Mexican Hugo Sánchez and Chilean Iván Zamorano.[75] Although

the knee injuries before 2002 meant he "was robbed of the explosiveness 🛡 of his early

years" (FourFourTwo magazine) by the time he signed for Real Madrid, Ronaldo was named

by Marca as 🛡 a member of the "Best foreign eleven in Real Madrid's

history".[52][76]

While past his 1990s prime, Ronaldo still drew praise from 🛡 his Madrid

colleagues, with Zidane stating, "Without hesitation, Ronaldo is the best player I ever

played with or against. He 🛡 had such an ease with the ball. Every day I trained with

him, I saw something different, something new, something 🛡 beautiful."[77] Michael Owen,

who joined Madrid in 2004, acknowledged that he never got the chance to play with

Ronaldo in 🛡 his prime when "he had absolute blistering speed and strength, mesmerizing

foot speed, he was just a blur, he'd be 🛡 that fast", before adding, "even in training,

he showed more than enough to convince me that I would have loved 🛡 to play with him at

his peak."[78] Teammates for six months, Van Nistelrooy said, "Ronaldo was the best

natural talent 🛡 I ever played with. His innate ability went beyond anything that I'd

ever seen or played alongside."[79][80]

AC Milan

Ronaldo's Inter Milan 🛡 away jersey

(left) and A.C. Milan away jersey (right) in the San Siro museum. He played for Inter

from 1997 🛡 to 2002, and A.C. Milan from 2007 to 2008.

On 18 January 2007, it was

reported that Ronaldo agreed terms with 🛡 AC Milan for a transfer of €8.05 million.[81]

Departing Real Madrid having been the club's leading goalscorer for all of 🛡 his four

full seasons, Ronaldo thanked everyone except Capello, "I would like to thank the fans

who've supported me all 🛡 the time and thank all the teammates that I've had here and all

the coaches I've had – except one".[82] 🛡 Capello, who dropped him due to weight issues,

commented, "I wish him the best of luck in doing what he 🛡 used to do which is being a

great player."[82] On 25 January, Ronaldo flew from Madrid to Milan, with statements 🛡 on

the club's website stating Ronaldo was in Milan for a medical, and that a meeting had

been arranged with 🛡 Real Madrid officials to discuss and finalize his transfer to the

Milanese club.[83] On 26 January, Ronaldo successfully completed his 🛡 medical tests at

the Milanello training complex under the supervision of club doctors, and the transfer

was completed on 30 🛡 January.[84] Wearing the number 99 jersey, he made his debut as a

substitute on 11 February 2007 in the 2–1 🛡 victory over Livorno.[85] The next game at

Siena, on 17 February, Ronaldo scored twice and assisted on a third goal 🛡 in his first

start for Milan, as they won 4–3.[86] In his first season, Ronaldo scored seven goals

in 14 🛡 appearances.[51]

Ineligible to play having signed for the club mid season,

Ronaldo (standing sixth from left) celebrated the 2007 UEFA Champions 🛡 League triumph

with his A.C. Milan teammates.

After his move to Milan, Ronaldo joined the list of the

few players to 🛡 have played for both Inter Milan and AC Milan in the Derby della

Madonnina, and is one of few players 🛡 to have scored for both rival teams in the Milan

derby game (for Inter in the 1998–99 season and for 🛡 AC Milan in the 2006–07 season),

the others being players such as Giuseppe Meazza, Zlatan Ibrahimović, Enrico Candiani

and Aldo 🛡 Cevenini.[87] Ronaldo is also one of the few players to have started for Real

Madrid and FC Barcelona, which also 🛡 boasts a heated rivalry. Ronaldo, however, has

never transferred directly between rival clubs. Ronaldo only played 300-plus minutes in

his 🛡 second season at Milan due to recurring injury problems and weight issues.[88]

Ronaldo's only goals in the 2007–08 season, besides 🛡 his goal against Lecce in

pre-season, came in a 5–2 victory against Napoli at the San Siro, where he scored 🛡 an

emotional double.[89] It was also the first time Milan's much hyped attacking trio of

Kaká, Alexandre Pato and Ronaldo, 🛡 known as Ka-Pa-Ro, played together.[90]

Despite

tremendous success over the past decade, Ronaldo never won the UEFA Champions League in

his 🛡 club career.[91] In 2024, FourFourTwo magazine named him the best player never to

win the competition;[92] in 2024, Sky Sports 🛡 ranked him the second–best player (after

Diego Maradona) never to win the Champions League or European Cup.[93] Ronaldo stated,

"I 🛡 live football with a passion that doesn't give me any peace for not winning the

Champions League – it's a 🛡 trophy everyone would love to win."[94] In 2011, Paul Wilson

wrote in The Guardian, "Ronaldo was unlucky in his timing 🛡 or his choice of club – for

there is no doubt that at his very best he would have walked 🛡 into any club in the

world."[73] During the 2006–07 season, though Milan won the 2006–07 title, Ronaldo was

cup-tied with 🛡 Madrid and ineligible to take part.[95][96] The closest that he came to

Champions League success was in 2003 when he 🛡 helped Real Madrid to the semi-finals, in

which they lost to Juventus.[97]

On 13 February 2008, Ronaldo suffered a severe

season-ending 🛡 knee injury while jumping for a cross in Milan 1–1 draw with Livorno, and

was stretchered off and taken to 🛡 a hospital.[98] The club confirmed after the match

that Ronaldo had ruptured the kneecap ligament in his left knee. It 🛡 marked the third

such occurrence of this injury, which he suffered twice to his right knee in 1999 and

2000.[99] 🛡 Teammate Clarence Seedorf stated, "My heart stopped beating because it was

like watching a repeat of the injury he suffered 🛡 playing for Inter Milan against Lazio

[in 2000]. His reaction was the same."[100] Silvio Berlusconi told Italy's RAI TV, "He

🛡 fears for his career. I called him last evening and told him to believe in himself. He

has enormous physical 🛡 potential."[99] Ronaldo was released by Milan at the end of the

season, as his contract expired and was not renewed.[101][102]

Corinthians

2009–2010:

🛡 Paulistão and Copa do Brasil

Ronaldo during his Corinthians unveiling in 2009, with

Brazil president Lula handing him the jersey

Ronaldo trained 🛡 with Rio de Janeiro based

Brazilian club Flamengo during his recovery from knee surgery, and the club's board of

directors 🛡 said that the doors were open for him to join.[103][104] On 9 December,

however, Ronaldo signed a one-year deal with 🛡 Flamengo's league rival Corinthians.[105]

The announcement received much publicity in the Brazilian press about his choice of

Corinthians over Flamengo, 🛡 since Ronaldo publicly declared himself a Flamengo fan.[101]

Rio-based sports newspaper Lance! called Ronaldo a "phenomenal traitor", and some angry

🛡 fans burned Ronaldo shirts outside the Flamengo headquarters.[105] Ronaldo responded

that playing for Corinthians was the only option open to 🛡 him. "I understand perfectly,

I'm openly a Flamengo fan. But I was training with Flamengo for four months and didn't

🛡 receive any offer. Corinthians made an offer that will let me continue my

career."[105]

Ronaldo played his first match for Corinthians 🛡 on 4 March 2009, a Copa do

Brasil match against Itumbiara at Estádio Juscelino Kubitschek, in which he came as 🛡 a

substitute for Jorge Henrique.[106] Ronaldo scored his first goal for Corinthians on 8

March 2009 in a Campeonato Paulista 🛡 match against Palmeiras.[107] Scoring eight goals

in nine matches, his form led to calls for his return to the Brazil 🛡 national team –

nearly 70% of respondents in a poll for the O Globo realsbet penalty newspaper voted that he should

🛡 be reinstated, with the country's president Lula also calling for his immediate

return.[108] He scored twice in a 3–1 win 🛡 against local rivals Santos in the first leg

of the state championship final, with Santos idol Pelé looking on from 🛡 the stands. His

second goal, a chip over the Santos goalkeeper from 30 yards out, sent the Corinthians

fans into 🛡 hysteria.[108] Ultimately, he helped Corinthians win the Campeonato Paulista

with 10 goals in 14 games.[109]

Ronaldo scored in Corinthians 4–2 aggregate 🛡 defeat of

Internacional in the final of the 2009 Copa do Brasil, helping the club win the trophy

for the 🛡 third time (the second of his career), thus earning a spot in the Copa

Libertadores 2010.[110][111] Following an injury lay 🛡 off he returned on 20 September in

a match against Goiás, and a week later scored for Corinthians in a 🛡 draw against São

Paulo FC. He finished the 2009 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A with 12 goals in 20

matches.[112]

2011: Retirement

Ronaldo 🛡 greets fans at the Emirates Stadium in London in

March 2011, one month after announcing his retirement

In February 2010, Ronaldo 🛡 signed

a contract extension with Corinthians that would keep him with the club until the end

of 2011, and said 🛡 he would then retire.[113][114] Commenting on his weight issues

following this announcement, Brian Homewood of The Guardian states, "Sadly, Ronaldo's

🛡 celebrity is now more of a draw than his skills on the pitch – Coldplay, Israeli prime

minister Shimon Peres 🛡 and actor Hugh Jackman have all visited São Paulo to get a

picture with the roly‑poly star."[115]

In February 2011, after 🛡 Corinthians were

eliminated from the 2011 Copa Libertadores by the Colombian team Deportes Tolima,

Ronaldo announced his retirement from football, 🛡 concluding an 18-year

career.[116][117][118] In an emotional press conference on 14 February, he cited pain

and hypothyroidism as the reasons 🛡 for his premature retirement.[119] He discovered he

had hypothyroidism – a condition which slows down metabolism and causes weight gain 🛡 –

during tests with Milan in 2007.[120]

The player said that the problem could be solved

by taking hormones, but this 🛡 practice is forbidden in football and would lead to a

suspension for doping.[121] However, doctors disagree that such treatment would 🛡 be

confused with doping, with some publicly claiming that Ronaldo had lied when he said

could not treat his hypothyroidism.[122] 🛡 Corinthians' own doctor said that Ronaldo did

not have this disease. Hypothyroidism is usually associated with a slight weight gain

🛡 (eminently due to fluid accumulation, not fat gain) and difficulty getting rid of extra

pounds.[123][124]

Ronaldo admitted his body had finally 🛡 succumbed to the crippling

litany of injuries that had blighted his career: "It's very hard to leave something

that made 🛡 me so happy. Mentally I wanted to continue but I have to acknowledge that I

lost to my body. The 🛡 head wants to go on but the body can't take any more. I think of

an action but I can't 🛡 do it the way I want to. It's time to go."[125]

International

career

Ronaldo (pictured with the FIFA Confederations Cup in 2024) 🛡 won the trophy with

Brazil in 1997

Ronaldo made his international debut for Brazil on 23 March 1994 in a

friendly 🛡 match in Recife against Argentina.[126] His first senior goal for Brazil came

on 4 May 1994 in a 3–0 friendly 🛡 win against Iceland.[127] He went to the 1994 FIFA

World Cup in the United States aged 17, but did not 🛡 play as Brazil went on to win the

tournament.[128] He stated he was "overjoyed" at the experience.[129] He was then 🛡 known

as Ronaldinho ("little Ronaldo" in Portuguese), because Ronaldo Rodrigues de Jesus, his

older teammate, was also called Ronaldo and 🛡 later nicknamed Ronaldão ("big Ronaldo") to

further distinguish them.[130] Another player, Ronaldo de Assis Moreira, now widely

known as Ronaldinho, 🛡 was called Ronaldinho Gaúcho when he joined the Brazil team in

1999.[131][132]

Summer Olympics and Copa América

At the 1996 Summer Olympics 🛡 in

Atlanta, Ronaldo used the name Ronaldinho again, since centre-back Ronaldo Guiaro, two

years his senior, was one of his 🛡 teammates. Brazil went on to win the bronze

medal.[133] Ronaldo also represented Brazil in the 1995 Copa América (finishing second)

🛡 and won both the 1997 and the 1999 editions of the tournament. He was named player of

the tournament in 🛡 1997, was the top scorer in 1999 and scored in the finals of both,

against Bolivia in 1997 and Uruguay 🛡 in 1999.[134][135][136] He also took part in the

friendly Tournoi de France in 1997, preceding the 1998 FIFA World Cup, 🛡 scoring a goal

as Brazil became runners-up. Ronaldo starred alongside Romário, dubbed the Ro-Ro

attack, at the 1997 FIFA Confederations 🛡 Cup, helping Brazil win their first ever

Confederations Cup title where he finished as the third-highest scorer with 4 goals,

🛡 scoring a hat-trick against Australia in the final.[137] On the combination of Ronaldo

and Romário, Will Sharp writes: "...to the 🛡 elation of all those fortunate enough to

have watched them, they found themselves together, fated with the opportunity to forge

🛡 one of the most outrageous offensive pairings the game has ever seen. Their partnership

was brief but it was inexplicably 🛡 brilliant."[138]

1998 FIFA World Cup

"The way he

combined powerhouse athleticism with a poetic touch made for an awesome sight. In the

🛡 1990s, in his physical pomp, in his free-flowing prime, there was nothing remotely like

him. By the time the 1998 🛡 World Cup came along his reputation had extended to the point

of fully formed marvel. A happening." —Amy Lawrence, The 🛡 Guardian.[128]

Ronaldo entered

the 1998 FIFA World Cup billed as the world's greatest player by reporters in the

sport.[139] Jacob Steinberg 🛡 of The Guardian writes, "In 1998, no one was as ferociously

talented as Ronaldo, whose supernatural mixture of power, pace 🛡 and skill had made him

the player every child in the playground wanted to be; at the age of 21, 🛡 the hopes and

dreams of a nation rested on his shoulders."[139]

Ronaldo scored four goals and made

three assists en route 🛡 to the final,[140][141] scoring once and assisting Bebeto's goal

in a 3–0 win against Morocco in the team's second group 🛡 stage match,[142] netting twice

in a 4–1 win against Chile in the round of 16, set–up two goals in Brazil's 🛡 3–2 victory

over Denmark in the quarter-finals,[140][143] and scored once in the 1–1 draw against

the Netherlands in the semi-finals, 🛡 also netting Brazil's first penalty in the 4–2

shoot–out victory.[143][144][145] Hours before the final against France, Ronaldo

suffered a convulsive 🛡 fit.[140] At first, he was removed from the starting lineup 72

minutes before the match, and the team sheet (with 🛡 Edmundo as his replacement) was

submitted to the FIFA delegate.[139] The starting line up without Ronaldo was released

to a 🛡 stunned world media.[139] The BBC's John Motson stated, "The scenes in the

commentary box have been absolute mayhem and chaos."[146] 🛡 However, shortly before kick

off, after pleading that he felt fine and requested to play, Ronaldo was reinstated by

Brazil 🛡 coach Mário Zagallo.[139]

Stade de France (interior pictured), where Ronaldo

performed in the 1998 World Cup Final despite suffering a convulsive 🛡 fit six hours

before kick off

Ronaldo was the last Brazilian player out of the tunnel as the teams

entered the 🛡 field. During the playing of the Brazil national anthem the camera focused

on him throughout, with Ronaldo showing little emotion.[146] 🛡 Steinberg states that

Ronaldo "sleepwalked" through the final, which also saw him injured in a collision with

French goalkeeper Fabien 🛡 Barthez.[139] Zagallo admitted the fears over Ronaldo affected

his team psychologically, and stated "for the whole of the first half 🛡 I was wondering

whether to take him off", but feared a public outcry in Brazil had he done so.[139]

Brazil 🛡 lost the match to hosts France 3–0.[147] Ronaldo later reflected: "We lost the

World Cup but I won another cup 🛡 – my life."[140]

An inquest was launched in Brazil,

with team doctor Lídio Toledo telling the commission "imagine if I stopped 🛡 Ronaldo

playing and Brazil lost. At that moment I'd have to go and live on the North

Pole."[139] Adrian Williams, 🛡 professor of clinical neurology at Birmingham University,

said that Ronaldo should not have played, that he would have been feeling 🛡 the after

effects of the seizure, and "there is no way that he would have been able to perform to

🛡 the best of his ability within 24 hours of his first fit – if it was his first

fit."[148] Despite 🛡 his sub-par performance in the final due to his seizure hours

earlier, Ronaldo was awarded the Golden Ball as the 🛡 best player of the tournament for

his performances leading up to the final, and finished the tournament as the

joint-third 🛡 highest scorer.[149] The nature of the incident set off a trail of

questions and allegations which persisted for years, with 🛡 Alex Bellos writing in The

Guardian,

When Ronaldo's health scare was revealed after the match, the situation's

unique circumstances lent itself 🛡 to conspiracy theories. Here was the world's most

famous sportsman, about to take part in the most important match of 🛡 his career, when he

suddenly, inexplicably, fell ill. Was it stress, epilepsy, or had he been

drugged?"[150]

A conspiracy surrounded Nike, 🛡 the sportswear company who sponsored

Ronaldo and the Brazilian national team, with some in Brazil believing the company had

forced 🛡 Ronaldo to play.[150] The parliamentary inquiry was unable to find any wider

conspiracy, although the Brazilian public remained unconvinced.[150] Reporting 🛡 for CNN,

Don Riddell wrote, "It's one of the great mysteries of our time: not the Loch Ness

Monster, Stonehenge 🛡 or the Lost City of Atlantis; it's the case of the missing striker

– not so much a whodunit, more 🛡 a kind of a what the heck happened?"[151]

2002 FIFA

World Cup

Prior to the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Ronaldo had barely 🛡 played since rupturing

the cruciate ligament in his right knee in April 2000, and he missed Brazil's entire

qualification campaign 🛡 where, in his absence, the team had been poor.[152] Tim Vickery

writes, "Without Ronaldo, Brazil were a shambles, fortunate even 🛡 to get to the

tournament. With him, it was a different story."[153] In a remarkable comeback from

injury that had 🛡 threatened his career, Ronaldo led Brazil to their record fifth World

Cup title, receiving the Golden Boot as top scorer 🛡 with eight goals.[154] Many

publications regarded his personal triumph as "redemption" for what occurred at the

previous World Cup.[128][154][155][156] Ronaldo 🛡 spoke about his obsession with lifting

the World Cup trophy, having missed out in 1998. "I used to visualise the 🛡 trophy in

front of my eyes and imagine what a wonderful feeling it must be to hold it up in 🛡 the

air. It was a fabulous feeling actually to hold it in my hands and kiss it."[129]

Dubbed the "three 🛡 R's", Ronaldo starred in a formidable attack alongside Rivaldo and

Ronaldinho, and the trio were named in the FIFA World 🛡 Cup All-Star

Team.[128][157]

Ronaldo pictured with an Israeli sports journalist on 29 June, the day

before the 2002 World Cup Final

Ronaldo 🛡 scored against every opponent in the tournament

except in the quarter-finals against England.[158] The match-winner against Turkey in

the semi-final, 🛡 with the winning goal a toe-poke finish with little back-lift while on

the run – a finish he learned while 🛡 playing futsal in his youth – the final whistle saw

fans behind the goal hoist huge white letters to spell 🛡 out his name, akin to the

Hollywood Sign.[128][159] Much attention was on his haircut – in which his head was

🛡 shaved except the forelock – done as a deliberate distraction to shift media attention

away from a leg injury. He 🛡 revealed that "when I arrived in training with this haircut

everybody stopped talking about the injury".[160] In the final against 🛡 Germany in

Yokohama, Japan, Ronaldo scored twice in Brazil's 2–0 win and tied Pelé's Brazilian

record of 12 career World 🛡 Cup goals.[161] Ronaldo was the first player to seek out

German players to offer his condolences,[155] before he was congratulated 🛡 by Pelé when

receiving his World Cup winners medal.[162] Gérard Saillant, the French surgeon who

operated on Ronaldo's knee, was 🛡 in the crowd as his guest, and stated after the game;

"This gives hope to everyone who is injured, even 🛡 those who aren't sportsmen, to see

that by fighting you can make it. He's back to where he was; it's 🛡 hugely satisfying and

I am very moved."[163]

Ronaldo received a number of accolades for his achievement,

including the Laureus World Sports 🛡 Award for Comeback of the Year and the BBC World

Sport Star of the Year, and in December 2002 he 🛡 dedicated his third FIFA World Player

of the Year award to the medical team which helped him recover.[164][165][166] In a

🛡 2024 interview with Fox Sports, Ronaldo stated, "the best team I played in was the

Brazilian one in 2002, we 🛡 felt that we could always score. It was a team without any

vanity, or individuals. The collective was important."[167]

2006 FIFA 🛡 World Cup

Ronaldo

mural in Berlin promoting Brazilian Joga Bonito style of play. The work was

commissioned by Nike prior to 🛡 the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

On 2 June 2004, Ronaldo

scored an unusual hat-trick of penalties for Brazil against arch-rivals 🛡 Argentina in a

2006 World Cup qualifying match, which put them top of the group.[168] With 10 goals in

15 🛡 games, including a goal against Venezuela in the last game to secure first place,

Ronaldo was the South American top 🛡 scorer in Brazil's qualifying campaign.[169] Prior

to the tournament, questions were asked of his weight and fitness,[170][171] but was

declared 🛡 fit for Brazil's opening match with Croatia.[172]

At the 2006 World Cup,

Ronaldo was part of a much-publicized "magic quartet" alongside 🛡 Adriano, Ronaldinho and

Kaká.[173][174] The all-star Brazilian team was promoted as masters of Joga Bonito,

"the beautiful game", which was 🛡 advertised by Nike before the tournament.[175][176]

Although Brazil won their first two group games against Croatia and Australia, Ronaldo

was 🛡 repeatedly jeered for being overweight and slow,[177] but coach Carlos Alberto

Parreira kept him in the starting lineup.[178]

With two goals 🛡 against Japan in the

third match, Ronaldo became the 20th player to score in three World Cups and also

equalled 🛡 the all-time World Cup finals scoring record of fourteen, held by Gerd Müller

(Ronaldo scored at France 98, Korea/Japan 2002 🛡 and Germany 2006).[178] He then broke

Müller's record in the Round of 16 match against Ghana by scoring his fifteenth-career

🛡 World Cup goal.[65][179] With his third goal of the tournament, Ronaldo became only the

second player ever, after Jürgen Klinsmann, 🛡 to score at least three goals in each of

three World Cups.[180] Brazil, however, were knocked out by France 1–0 🛡 with a goal by

striker Thierry Henry in the quarter-finals.[181] Ronaldo was awarded the Bronze Shoe

as the third-highest goal-scorer 🛡 of the World Cup.[182]

Having been listed in Guinness

World Records, Ronaldo stated, "I am proud of my career and of 🛡 the records I set. But I

know that one day they will be broken."[183] Ronaldo and Klinsmann's shared record of

🛡 at least three goals in three separate World Cup finals was broken by German striker

Miroslav Klose, who has a 🛡 record of at least four goals in each of three tournaments,

having netted five at both the 2002 and 2006 🛡 finals, and four at the 2010

tournament.[184] Ronaldo finished with fifteen goals in nineteen World Cup matches, for

an average 🛡 of 0.79 per game.[185] His teammate Kaká reflected, "Ronaldo is the best

player I have ever played with. I have 🛡 seen il Fenomeno do things nobody else has ever

done."[186]

Farewell match and sporadic appearances

Ronaldo playing in the Match

Against Poverty 🛡 in Bern, March 2014

In February 2011, it was announced that Ronaldo

would be given one last match for Brazil, a 🛡 friendly against Romania in São Paulo on 7

June 2011, five years after his last match with the national team.[187] 🛡 Brazilian

Football Confederation official Ricardo Teixeira stated that it was fitting that his

final game should take place in Brazil 🛡 while representing his nation.[188]

Ronaldo

played for 15 minutes in a match that ended with a Brazilian victory with a goal 🛡 from

Fred.[189] Fred celebrated his goal with Ronaldo's famous 'finger wag' celebration

along with his Brazilian teammates. Ronaldo was introduced 🛡 after 30 minutes, partnering

19-year-old Neymar in attack, and had three shots on target which were saved by the

Romanian 🛡 goalkeeper Ciprian Tătărușanu.[190] After the first half ended, Ronaldo made a

farewell speech to the crowd.[190] With 62 goals for 🛡 Brazil Ronaldo retired from

international football as the second-highest goalscorer for his country, behind only

Pelé (Neymar has since surpassed 🛡 Pelé, with Ronaldo the third-highest scorer as of

September 2024).[191][192]

On 13 December 2011 Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane played a

charity 🛡 match with their friends against former and current players of the German team

Hamburg in the ninth edition of the 🛡 Match Against Poverty series, which Ronaldo and

Zidane established in 2003.[193][194][195] In December 2012, Ronaldo and Zidane

reunited for the 🛡 Match Against Poverty in Porto Alegre, Portugal, with the field

littered with World Cup winners from France and Brazil, which 🛡 also saw 1982 World Cup

star Zico (Ronaldo's childhood idol) turn out for Ronaldo's team.[196] In January 2013,

Ronaldo was 🛡 named one of the six ambassadors of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in

Brazil.[197]

Ronaldo was chosen as a goodwill ambassador 🛡 for the United Nations

Development Programme (UNDP) in 2000 as he had the highest global appeal among

sportspeople, and he 🛡 accepted the role as he saw it as "an obligation" to help with

causes around the world.[198] Ronaldo played in 🛡 the UNDP's 11th Match Against Poverty

on 4 March 2014 against a Zidane XI in Bern, Switzerland, with proceeds raised 🛡 helping

the recovery efforts in the Philippines in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan.[199] Joined by

Didier Drogba in attack, Ronaldo 🛡 scored a hat-trick in the next year's match on 21

April 2024 in St Etienne, France, with proceeds going towards 🛡 the African countries

most affected by the Ebola epidemic.[200][201]

On 14 June 2024, Ronaldo featured at the

2024 FIFA World Cup 🛡 opening ceremony held at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow,

Russia.[202] He walked out with a child wearing a Russia 2024 🛡 shirt at the beginning,

and returned at the end of the ceremony with the official ball of the 2024 World 🛡 Cup –

Adidas Telstar 18 – which was sent into space with the International Space Station crew

in March and 🛡 came back to Earth in early June.[202]

Style of play and legacy

Ronaldo is

regarded as one of the greatest and most 🛡 complete forwards of all time.[65][73][203]

Nicknamed Il (or O) Fenomeno (the phenomenon),[204] he was a prolific goalscorer, and

despite being 🛡 more of an individualistic attacker, he was also capable of providing

assists for his teammates, due to his vision, passing 🛡 and crossing

ability.[73][205][206] He was an extremely powerful, fast, and technical player, with

excellent movement, as well as being a 🛡 composed finisher.[207][208][209] Highly

regarded for his technical ability, Ronaldo was able to use both feet, despite being

naturally right footed,[210][211] 🛡 and is considered one of the most skilful dribblers

in the game.[212] Ronaldo would also operate outside the penalty area 🛡 before running

with the ball towards goal,[65][73] with Rob Smyth writing, "he played like every

attack had a 10-second deadline.. 🛡 he would explode into life with no warning for

defenders."[23] He frequently beat several players when dribbling at speed, and

🛡 excelled in one on one situations, due to his ball control, acceleration, agility,

balance and nimble footwork in his prime.[65][73][203][212]

His 🛡 coach at Barcelona,

Bobby Robson, commented: "Ronaldo could start from the halfway line and the whole

stadium would ignite. He 🛡 was the fastest thing I've ever seen running with the ball.

Had he managed to stay free of injury, he 🛡 had every chance of becoming the best

footballer ever."[23] In one on one situations, Ronaldo often used elaborate feints to

🛡 trick and beat defenders and goalkeepers; he popularised the use of many football

tricks such as the elastico and the 🛡 step over.[65][73][213] Sid Lowe of Sports

Illustrated wrote, "When he was one on one with the goalkeeper, you knew that 🛡 he would

score. He was so natural, so cool, so utterly in control. He would dip the shoulder,

step over, 🛡 and bang!"[35]

"There were two Ronaldos: the one that returned after

long-term injury in 2002 was a great goalscorer, but the 🛡 1990s version was a great

everything. At his fearsome peak for PSV, Barcelona and Inter Milan he was arguably the

🛡 most dangerous striker the world has ever seen." —Rob Smyth, The Guardian.[23]

His

Barcelona teammate Óscar García observed, "I'd never seen 🛡 anyone play football with

such technical ability, creativity and precision at that incredible speed. What stood

out to all of 🛡 us, from the moment we met Ronnie, was that he could do things which

other players found very difficult and 🛡 make them look easy. But he could also produce

those things while running at an unbelievable, explosive pace."[32] With his

🛡 combination of speed, skill and finishing Ronaldinho called Ronaldo "the most complete

striker there has ever been", a view echoed 🛡 by Zlatan Ibrahimović, who stated, "as a

football player, he was complete. There will never, in my view, be a 🛡 better player than

him."[214] The goalscoring idol of Lionel Messi, the Argentine states "Ronaldo was the

best striker I've ever 🛡 seen. He was so fast he could score from nothing."[215] Wanting

to emulate Ronaldo growing up, Egypt and Liverpool forward 🛡 Mohamed Salah opined, "The

ability, the speed, the intelligence, he had everything".[216] Naming Ronaldo as an

inspiration, Wayne Rooney stated, 🛡 "as an out-and-out forward he was probably the

best."[217] The outstanding influence for a generation of strikers, from Karim Benzema

🛡 to Sergio Agüero, with Romelu Lukaku stating "he changed the dimension of a striker"

and could "dribble like a winger, 🛡 run like a sprinter", Zlatan added, "nobody

influenced football and the players who emerged as much as Ronaldo".[218]

Ronaldo, as

so 🛡 many of those who looked up to him acknowledge, changed what it is to be a

centre-forward. Every time you 🛡 see a striker who is expected to hold the ball up, beat

players, win headers, shoot from range, drop deep, 🛡 do everything a striker can possibly

do – it might be worth remembering him. He shifted boundaries, challenged convention,

just 🛡 as much as Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have altered our perceptions of what a

winger might be. Ronaldo, the original 🛡 Ronaldo, inspired a phalanx of imitators,

players we see on our screens every weekend. But he also turned the game 🛡 so that it

will always look just a little bit like him. More than most, he made that No. 9 🛡 his

own. Rory Smith writing for ESPN on Ronaldo changing the game for strikers, March

2024.[218]

Emilio Butragueño stated, "Ronaldo creates 🛡 a goalscoring opportunity where

it doesn't exist. Most strikers need the midfielders and their teammates, but he does

not."[219] On 🛡 his speed of thought, Kaká said "For me the best players are those who

are able to think of a 🛡 play and execute it quickest and in the best way possible, and

Ronaldo was the best at that. The speed 🛡 of thought he had – and the speed he had to

carry out his actions – were perfect."[219] Ronaldo was 🛡 also a strong and powerful

player who could shield the ball from the opposition, with former Italian defender

Alessandro Nesta 🛡 (who faced Ronaldo in a high-profile one on one duel in the 1998 UEFA

Cup final which was billed as 🛡 "the best attacker against the best defender in Serie A")

stating: "It was the worst experience of my career. Ronaldo 🛡 is the hardest attacker

I've ever had to face."[220] Asked who was the toughest opponent of his career, Fabio

Cannavaro 🛡 responded, "I have no doubt, Ronaldo, the phenomenon. For my generation he

was what Maradona or Pelé were for the 🛡 previous ones. He was unmarkable."[221] Sid Lowe

compared Ronaldo's ability to take on a number of opponents on a single 🛡 run to what

rugby player Jonah Lomu was doing in the same era.[35] Regarding Ronaldo's influence on

the evolution of 🛡 the centre-forward role, French former forward Thierry Henry said: "He

did things nobody had seen before. He, together with Romário 🛡 and George Weah,

reinvented the centre-forward position. They were the first to drop from the box to

pick up the 🛡 ball in midfield, switch to the flanks, attract and disorientate the

central defenders with their runs, their accelerations, their dribbling."[222]

Ronaldo

🛡 holding his ankle in 2010. The injury was the latest for a striker who suffered serious

knee injuries which hampered 🛡 his career in the 2000s.

Comparing his natural ability to

Roger Federer, Paul MacDonald of Goal wrote, "there's a joy to 🛡 be had watching

something we know to be extremely difficult executed with considerable ease. Ronaldo in

his prime was able 🛡 to do that better than anyone who has ever played the game."[223] A

reliance on his superior innate ability is 🛡 given as a reason for his application in

training often not being as high as his teammates – though his 🛡 knee issues may also

have been a factor – with his Brazil teammate Emerson stating "Ronaldo felt he didn't

need 🛡 to work as hard as us, that he could do in two days what the rest of us would take

🛡 ten days to do. And usually, he was right".[223] On his precocious talent – a talent

which saw him become 🛡 the youngest FIFA World Player of the Year at age 20, and youngest

Ballon d'Or recipient aged 21 – Rob 🛡 Smyth of The Guardian wrote in 2024, "Ronaldo is

easily the best of the past 30 years, possibly ever. The 🛡 other Ronaldo and Messi were

brilliant teenagers but had nothing like the same impact at that age. Only Pelé, Diego

🛡 Maradona and George Best can really compare."[23] Asked to name the best player of his

lifetime, José Mourinho said, "Ronaldo, 🛡 El Fenomeno. Cristiano Ronaldo and Leo Messi

have had longer careers. They have remained at the top every day for 🛡 15 years. However,

if we are talking strictly about talent and skill, nobody surpasses Ronaldo."[224]

Mikaël Silvestre states, "I played 🛡 against [Lionel] Messi and I played with Cristiano

at Manchester United, but he [Ronaldo] is something else in terms of 🛡 speed. Cristiano,

maybe you can guess that he has three or four tricks he would use most of the time, 🛡 but

Ronaldo, it was always something different. He was inventing things on the spot, so you

can't guide him left 🛡 or right because he's going to get out of these situations, no

matter what".[225] In 2024, Ronaldo was named in 🛡 the Ballon d'Or Dream Team, a greatest

all-time XI published by France Football magazine.[226]

At his physical peak in the

1990s, 🛡 Ronaldo became severely affected by the knee injuries he suffered from late 1999

onward and the subsequent weight gain during 🛡 his inactivity, which limited his speed,

fitness, and mobility.[73][207] According to his physiotherapist Nilton Petrone,

Ronaldo was vulnerable to injury 🛡 due to a medical condition combined with his explosive

running. "Ronaldo had a problem called trochlear dysplasia. This makes the 🛡 relationship

between the kneecap and the femur a bit unstable. There is no direct surgery for that

so the kneecap 🛡 keeps, for a lack of a better word, "dancing" on the femur. Ronaldo's

injuries weren't because his body was weak, 🛡 but because of his explosive capacity. He

didn't just run fast in a straight line, he also changed direction at 🛡 incredible speed.

Ronaldo moved from left to right very fast...so it was obvious, by the way that he

played, that 🛡 injuries were always a possibility".[54] Acknowledging "he was never quite

the same" after his knee injury in 2000, with "his 🛡 pace and sheer brute force

diminished in comparison to The Phenomenon" in the 1990s, FourFourTwo magazine ranked

him the best 🛡 player at the 2002 World Cup, adding "he was still a cut above the rest"

in the tournament.[227]

Club ownership

Real Valladolid

Ronaldo 🛡 in 2024 as the president

of Real Valladolid, his first club as owner

In September 2024, Ronaldo became the

majority owner 🛡 of La Liga club Real Valladolid after buying a 51% controlling stake in

the club for €30 million.[228][229] At his 🛡 unveiling as the club's new owner at

Valladolid city hall, Ronaldo stated, "I have gone through many stages in my 🛡 training

in football to prepare for this. Football is all about passion. We want to build the

best team possible 🛡 to compete while also giving information about our management with

transparency."[229]

Cruzeiro

In December 2024, Ronaldo bought a controlling stake in

his 🛡 boyhood club Cruzeiro. Investing 400 million reais ($70 million) in the club,

Ronaldo stated he wants to "give back to 🛡 Cruzeiro and take them where they deserve to

be."[230]

Personal life

Ronaldo during a 2005 meeting at the Brazilian Ministry of

Education

In 🛡 1997, Ronaldo met the Brazilian model and actress Susana Werner on the set

of the Brazilian telenovela Malhação when they 🛡 acted together in three

episodes.[231][232] Although they never married, they began a long-term relationship

and lived together in Milan until 🛡 the beginning of 1999.[233]

In December 1999, Ronaldo

married Brazilian footballer Milene Domingues, at the time pregnant with the couple's

first 🛡 son, Ronald, who was born in Milan, on 6 April 2000.[234] The marriage lasted

four years. In 2005, Ronaldo became 🛡 engaged to Brazilian model and MTV VJ Daniela

Cicarelli, who became pregnant but suffered a miscarriage; the relationship lasted only

🛡 three months after their luxurious wedding at the Château de Chantilly. The ceremony

reportedly cost £700,000 (€896,000).[235]

A practicing Catholic, Ronaldo 🛡 donated a

signed football to Pope Francis. Accompanied with a signed Brazil jersey from Pelé, it

is located in one 🛡 of the Vatican Museums.

Despite his fame – a 2003 poll by Nike listed

him the world's most famous sportsperson (and 🛡 third most famous person overall) –

Ronaldo is protective of his privacy, including with teammates, stating in an interview

with 🛡 The Telegraph, "each [player] has his own private life, and no one thinks about

anyone else's private life. Or talks 🛡 about it."[68] By 2003 he was fluent in

Portuguese, Spanish and Italian, and had a good understanding of English.[68]

In a 🛡 2005

interview with Folha de S.Paulo, Ronaldo revealed that, somewhat unexpectedly, he

identified racially as white,[236] generating a wider conversation 🛡 about the complex

role of race in Brazil.[237][238][239] Ronaldo's father, Nelio Nazario, stated, "He

knows full well that he's black. 🛡 Actually, at the time, I thought it was some

philosophy, something to that effect. Because he knows he's black."[238] According 🛡 to a

study led by geneticist Sérgio Pena of the Brazilian Institute of Geography and

Statistics, most Brazilians often have 🛡 a misconception about their roots. "The maternal

ancestry of the Brazilian white was one-third African, one third Amerindian, and one

🛡 third European. An individual who considers himself white may be genomically more

African than an individual who considers himself to 🛡 be brown or black."[238]

In April

2008, Ronaldo was involved in a scandal involving three travesti prostitutes whom he

met in 🛡 a nightclub in Rio de Janeiro.[240] Ronaldo claimed that upon discovering that

they were legally male, he offered themR$600 to 🛡 leave.[241] One of the three attempted

to blackmail Ronaldo, while the other two admitted to lying about having sex with

🛡 him.[242] Ronaldo's engagement to Maria Beatriz Antony was immediately halted,[243] but

resumed shortly after and they married in the same 🛡 year. Maria Beatriz Antony gave

birth to their first daughter, named Maria Sophia, in Rio de Janeiro, on 24 December

🛡 2008. In April 2009, the family moved to a new penthouse in São Paulo.[244] On 6 April

2010, Maria Beatriz 🛡 Antony gave birth to their second daughter. The girl, born in São

Paulo, was named Maria Alice, and was born 🛡 exactly 10 years after her older brother

Ronald.[245]

In December 2010, Ronaldo and his family moved to a new mansion in 🛡 São

Paulo.[246] Also in December, Ronaldo took a paternity test and was confirmed to be the

father of a boy 🛡 named Alexander, born in April 2005. The boy was born after a brief

relationship between Ronaldo and Michele Umezu, a 🛡 Brazilian waitress who Ronaldo first

met in Tokyo in 2002.[247][248] After the confirmation of his fourth child, Ronaldo

stated on 🛡 6 December 2010 that he had had a vasectomy, feeling that having four

children was enough.[249] Ronaldo and Maria Beatriz 🛡 Antony divorced in 2012.[250]

In a

2011 interview with the BBC, former Real Madrid teammate Steve McManaman spoke about

Ronaldo's personality. 🛡 "He could go in a restaurant, and I could go in with him, and

you're not just there with close 🛡 friends. He invites everybody. You'd be at a table

with him and it'd be a judge sitting opposite talking to 🛡 a politician with someone off

the street listening in. So he just had this amazing aura, where everyone wanted to

🛡 join him. Sometimes there'd be 20 to 30 people sitting at meal times with him. He was a

wonderful person. 🛡 Everybody would second that, no matter what club he played

for."[251]

Ronaldo with his Innovation in Sport Award at the Web 🛡 Summit in 2024

Ronaldo

was the co-owner of A1 Team Brazil, along with former F1 driver Emerson

Fittipaldi.[252] Ronaldo co-owns the 🛡 sports marketing company 9INE, with his friend,

mixed martial artist Anderson Silva, one of his clients.[253][254] A keen poker player,

🛡 in April 2013 Ronaldo became a member of PokerStars SportStar, and in 2014 he played a

charity poker tournament against 🛡 tennis star Rafael Nadal.[255] On 11 December 2014,

Ronaldo became a minority owner of the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the 🛡 North American

Soccer League.[256][257] In 2024, Ronaldo opened eight new branches of his youth

football school – the Ronaldo Academy 🛡 – in China, the U.S. and Brazil, with 100

expected to be opened worldwide by 2024.[258][259] In 2024, Ronaldo's son, 🛡 Ronald, was

selected for the junior football team representing Brazil in the 2024 Maccabiah

Games.[260] The Maccabiah is described as 🛡 "the Jewish Olympics"; Ronald is not Jewish,

but some participating countries have more relaxed rules about eligibility and Ronald

is 🛡 a member of a Jewish football club.[260]

In January 2024, Ronaldo announced his

fifth engagement, to model and businesswoman Celina Locks.[261][262] 🛡 Ronaldo and Locks

went on to marry in July of the same year.[263]

Religion

A practicing Catholic, Ronaldo

was baptized into the 🛡 faith in 2024.[264] He donated a signed football to Pope Francis

in 2014, which is now housed in the Vatican 🛡 Museums.[265]

Media

Ronaldo appeared in The

Simpsons season 18 episode "Marge Gamer" broadcast in April 2007.[266] Simon Crerar of

The Times listed 🛡 Ronaldo's performance as one of the thirty-three funniest cameos in

the history of the show.[267] Ronaldo made a cameo appearance 🛡 in Mike Bassett: England

Manager (2001) and each film of the Goal! film trilogy, Goal! (2005), Goal II: Living

the 🛡 Dream (2007) and Goal III: Taking on the World (2009).[268] Archive footage of

Ronaldo features in the music video "We 🛡 Are One (Ole Ola)", the official song of the

2014 World Cup by Pitbull and Jennifer Lopez.[269]

Ronaldo has appeared in 🛡 various

commercials, from Snickers chocolate bar to Pirelli tyres.[270][271] Ronaldo's usual

goal celebration of both arms outstretched – especially from 🛡 his early career – was the

basis for Pirelli's 1998 commercial where he replaced the figure of Christ from the

🛡 Christ the Redeemer statue that towers over his home city of Rio de Janeiro while in an

Inter Milan strip.[272] 🛡 It was controversial with the Catholic Church.[271] Released in

2000 for the PlayStation and Game Boy Color, the video game 🛡 Ronaldo V-Football was

exclusively endorsed by Ronaldo.[273] In 2024 Ronaldo was added as an icon to the

Ultimate Team in 🛡 EA Sports' FIFA video game FIFA 18, receiving a 95 rating along with

Brazilian compatriot Pelé, Argentine playmaker Diego Maradona, 🛡 former Russian

goalkeeper Lev Yashin and former French star Thierry Henry.[274] Ronaldo also appears

as the cover athlete on the 🛡 Icon edition of the game.[275][276]

In May 2024, DAZN

released the first of a six-part series titled Ronaldo: El Presidente. The 🛡 series takes

viewers inside the day-to-day running of Real Valladolid, revealing every challenge and

triumph in Valladolid's first full season 🛡 under their Brazilian president, intercut

with parallel narratives detailing the highs and lows of Ronaldo's own playing

career.[277]

"Ronaldo is the 🛡 most global of all athletes today, bar none." —Joaquin

Hidalgo, director of Nike's Brazilian marketing unit, 1998.[9]

Ronaldo has been

sponsored 🛡 by sportswear company Nike since the early part of his career. In 1996, Nike

signed Ronaldo to a 10-year contract 🛡 and to a lifetime endorsement deal worth overR$180

million.[278] Nicknamed R9 (his initial and shirt number),[204] Ronaldo is closely

associated 🛡 with the original Nike Mercurial R9 that was designed for him for the 1998

FIFA World Cup.[279][280] To celebrate 15 🛡 years of the boot, Nike created a Mercurial

Vapor IX inspired by the 1998 design, with Phil McCartney, VP of 🛡 Football Footwear for

Nike, stating; "Ronaldo's impact on the game 15 years ago was immense, and in the run

up 🛡 to 2014, we wanted to celebrate that boot and the man himself. We thought a modern

construction of his 1998 🛡 boot would be a great commemoration of that moment."[279] In

2024, Ronaldo's R9 Mercurial boots inspired the Nike Mercurial Superfly 🛡 VI boots

commissioned for Kylian Mbappé.[281] Unveiled in 2000, a bronze statue of Ronaldo is

located next to Ronaldo Field 🛡 at Nike headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon.[282]

Ronaldo

has appeared in a series of Nike commercials. He starred in the 1996 Nike 🛡 commercial

titled "Good vs Evil" in a gladiatorial game set in a Roman amphitheatre. Appearing

alongside football players from around 🛡 the world, including Paolo Maldini, Eric

Cantona, Luís Figo, Patrick Kluivert and Jorge Campos, they defend "the beautiful game"

against 🛡 a team of demonic warriors, destroying evil by winning the match.[283] In 1998,

he featured in a Nike commercial set 🛡 in an airport with a number of stars from the

Brazil national team, including Romário and Roberto Carlos.[284] In the 🛡 run-up to the

2002 World Cup in Korea and Japan, he starred in Nike's "Secret Tournament" commercial

(branded "Scopion KO") 🛡 directed by Terry Gilliam, appearing alongside football players

such as Thierry Henry, Fabio Cannavaro, Francesco Totti, Ronaldinho and Hidetoshi

Nakata, 🛡 with former player Eric Cantona as the tournament "referee".[285][286] In the

run-up to the 2014 World Cup, Ronaldo starred as 🛡 a mentor in Nike's Risk Everything

animated commercial with a host of current players in the Nike stable.[287]

Career

statistics

Club

Appearances and 🛡 goals by club, season and competition Club Season

League State league National cup Continental Other Total Division Apps Goals Apps 🛡 Goals

Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Cruzeiro 1993 Série A 14 12 2 0 — 4 8 🛡 1 0

21 20 1994 Série A — 18 22 — 8 2 — 26 24 Total 14 12 20 🛡 22 — 12 10 1 0 47 44 PSV

1994–95 Eredivisie 33 30 — 1 2 2[a] 3 — 36 🛡 35 1995–96 Eredivisie 13 12 — 3 1 5[a] 6 —

21 19 Total 46 42 — 4 3 7 🛡 9 — 57 54 Barcelona 1996–97 La Liga 37 34 — 4 6 7[b] 5 1[c] 2

49 47 Inter 🛡 Milan 1997–98 Serie A 32 25 — 4 3 11[a] 6 — 47 34 1998–99 Serie A 19 14 — 🛡 2

0 6[d] 1 1 0 28 15 1999–2000 Serie A 7 3 — 1 0 — — 8 3 🛡 2000–01 Serie A 0 0 — 0 0 0 0 —

0 0 2001–02 Serie A 10 7 — 1 🛡 0 5[a] 0 — 16 7 Total 68 49 — 8 3 22 7 1 0 99 59 Real

Madrid 🛡 2002–03 La Liga 31 23 — 1 0 11[d] 6 1 1 44 30 2003–04 La Liga 32 24 — 🛡 5 2 9[d] 4

2 1 48 31 2004–05 La Liga 34 21 — 1 0 10[d] 3 — 45 🛡 24 2005–06 La Liga 23 14 — 2 1 2[d]

0 — 27 15 2006–07 La Liga 7 1 — 🛡 2 1 4[d] 2 — 13 4 Total 127 83 — 11 4 36 15 3 2 177 104

AC 🛡 Milan 2006–07 Serie A 14 7 — — — — 14 7 2007–08 Serie A 6 2 — — — 🛡 — 6 2 Total 20 9 —

— — — 20 9 Corinthians 2009 Série A 20 12 10 8 🛡 8 3 — — 38 23 2010 Série A 11 6 9 3 — 7

3 — 27 12 2011 🛡 Série A — 2 0 — 2 0 — 4 0 Total 31 18 21 11 8 3 9 3 🛡 — 69 35 Career total

343 247 41 33 35 19 93 49 6 4 518 352

International

Appearances and goals by 🛡 national

team, year and competition Team Year Competitive Friendly Total Apps Goals Apps Goals

Apps Goals Brazil[288] 1994 — 4 🛡 1 4 1 1995 1[a] 0 5 3 6 3 1996 — 4 5 4 5 1997 11[b] 9 9

🛡 6 20 15 1998 7[c] 4 3 1 10 5 1999 6[d] 5 4 2 10 7 2000 — — 🛡 — 2001 — — — 2002 7[e] 8 5 3

12 11 2003 4[f] 3 4 0 8 3 2004 🛡 7[g] 6 4 0 11 6 2005 4[h] 1 1 0 5 1 2006 5[i] 3 2 2 8 5

🛡 2007 — — — 2008 — — — 2009 — — — 2010 — — — 2011 — 1 0 🛡 1 0 Total 52 39 46 23 98

62

Notes

Scores and results list Brazil's goal tally first.[192]

Table key ‡ Goal

scored 🛡 by penalty

Honours

Cruzeiro

PSV Eindhoven

Barcelona

Inter Milan

Real

Madrid

Corinthians

Brazil

Ronaldo's Golden Foot award in "The Champions Promenade" on

the seafront of the Principality of Monaco

Individual

See 🛡 also

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