Ronaldo (Brazilian footballer)
Ronaldo gives an interview in Brazil. Photo by Antônio Cruz/ABr (6 June 2005). | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Ronaldo Luis Nazário de Lima | ||
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) | ||
Position(s) | Striker | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Real Madrid | ||
Number | 9 | ||
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of July 1, 2006 |
Ronaldo Luis Nazário de Lima (born September 22, 1976), simply known as Ronaldo, is a Brazilian professional footballer. He holds dual citizenship with Spain. He plays as a striker for Brazil and the Spanish club Real Madrid. He has been nicknamed "The Phenomenon" (Portuguese: [O Fenômeno] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), Spanish: [El Fenómeno] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)). Ronaldo's speed, dribbling ability and goalscoring instincts have made him into what many believe to be one of the greatest forwards of all time.
He was named by Pelé as one of the top 125 greatest living footballers in March 2004. Ronaldo has enjoyed success at the international level, winning the 1994 and 2002 FIFA World Cups with Brazil. Ronaldo has won three FIFA World Player of the Year awards (1996, 1997, 2002). Ronaldo and former Real Madrid teammate Zinedine Zidane are the only two men to have won the award three times.
Personal life
Ronaldo was born in Bento Ribeiro, a neighbourhood in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Like many of his contemporaries, he began to play football in the streets of his neighbourhood.
In April 1999, Ronaldo married Milene Domingues. The marriage lasted four years and ended in divorce. The couple had a son, Ronald (born 2000). In 2005, he got engaged to Brazilian model and MTV VJ Daniella Cicarelli, who became pregnant but suffered a miscarriage; their relationship lasted 3 months after their engagement. He is currently dating Brazilian supermodel Raica Oliveira. Writer Andrew Downie asserted a correlation between Ronaldo's personal life and performance on the pitch, noting that his most prolific periods of goalscoring have coincided with the times when he was happily married [2]
In 2005, Ronaldo became co-owner of A1 Team Brazil, alongside Brazilian motorsports legend Emerson Fittipaldi. The team participates in the newly launched A1 Grand Prix series, with Nelson Piquet, Jr., Tony Kanaan and João Paulo Oliveira as drivers.
Football career
Ronaldo's footballing abilities were first recognised when he was 14. He was recommended to the Brazil youth team by World Cup winner Jairzinho, who also arranged for his own former club, Cruzeiro Esporte Clube, to sign him when he was old enough for a professional contract.[citation needed] Ronaldo scored 12 goals in 14 games in the Brazilian National Championship, and in the Minas Gerais State Championship he scored all three goals in Cruzeiro's 3-1 victory against arch-rival Atlético Mineiro. He was soon transferred for US$6 million to PSV Eindhoven, and later attracted the attention of Spain's FC Barcelona. He played for Barça in the 1996-1997 season, scoring 34 goals in 37 appearances (47 in 49, including appearances in the Copa del Rey and European Cup Winners Cup), then transferred to Inter Milan the following year.
Voted the FIFA World Player of the Year in 1996 and 1997, he also scored four goals and made four assists during the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Brazil lost the final to hosts France 3-0 after he suffered a convulsive fit the night before.[3] Adrian Williams, professor of clinical neurology at Birmingham University, said that Ronaldo should not have played, saying that he would have been feeling the after effects of the seizure and that " 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."[4]
A year after the 1998 World Cup, he severely injured his right knee and was out of the game for several months. During his first comeback in 2000, he played only seven minutes during a league game against Lazio before injuring his knee for a second time.
After two operations and 20 months of rehabilitation, Ronaldo came back for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, in which he scored two goals against Germany in the final. Ronaldo was the top scorer of the 2002 World Cup with eight goals, helping Brazil win their fifth World Cup title. Later in 2002 he won the World Player of the Year award for the third time, and transferred from Inter to Real Madrid for approximately €39,000,000, after frequent disputes with Inter coach Héctor Cúper.[citation needed] His transfer to Madrid was the subject of a media frenzy not just laced with the usual hype because of his reputation, but more so because he was now the third successive Galactico (or superstar) signed in as many years by the Spanish giants as part of their policy of signing the world's biggest superstar football players in order to maintain their levels of success whilst broadening their reaches of fame.[citation needed]
Ronaldo was such a well known signing that sales of his shirt on the day of his signing alone broke all records the world over.[citation needed] Proof of his fame came with the fact that even though Ronaldo was sidelined through injury until October 2002, fans continued to chant his name in the stands.[citation needed] Ronaldo scored twice in his debut for Real Madrid. That same reception was observed on the night of the final game of the season against Athletic Bilbao, where Ronaldo scored again to seal his first season with 23 league goals (not including the goals in the UEFA Champions League that included a hat-trick away at Manchester United) and the La Liga Championship title for 2003, which Ronaldo had previously failed to win whilst at FC Barcelona.
According to reports, Ronaldo turned down a ten-year, US$120 million contract from Red Bull New York of MLS in 2006, saying, "Right now I have a contract with Real Madrid and I'm only thinking about the World Cup, but without a doubt, the American market is one of my goals for the future."[5] But in a statement issued to the press, Red Bull denied having made an offer.[6]
The arrival of Ruud van Nistelrooy has made the future of Ronaldo uncertain at Real.
International career
This article needs additional citations for verification. |
Ronaldo made his international debut for Brazil in 1994, in a friendly match in Recife against Argentina. He was known then as Ronaldinho, since Ronaldo Guiaro, his team-mate on the 1996 Olympic Games was called Ronaldo, because he was older. The current Ronaldinho was known as Ronaldinho Gaúcho until the Ronaldinho-to-Ronaldo change occurred. He went to the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the USA as a 17-year-old but did not play.
Ronaldo won the Golden Shoe as the top scorer in the 2002 FIFA World Cup with eight goals, two in the final against Germany. He also equaled Pelé's Brazilian record of 12 World Cup goals, adding to the four he scored in the 1998 tournament.
On June 2 2004, Ronaldo scored an unusual hat-trick for Brazil against arch-rivals Argentina in a CONMEBOL qualifier for the 2006 World Cup, scoring all three of Brazil's goals from the penalty spot.
Although Brazil won their first two group games against Croatia and Australia, respectively, Ronaldo was repeated jeered for being overweight and slow, although Carlos Alberto Parreira kept him in the starting lineup in face of calls to have Ronaldo replaced. With his two goals against Japan in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, he became the 20th player ever to score in three different FIFA World Cups. Ronaldo scored in the 1998, 2002 and
s. On June 27 2006, he broke the all-time World Cup Finals scoring record of 14, held by Gerd Müller after scoring his 15th World Cup goal against Ghana in the 2006 FIFA World Cup Round of 16. He also equaled a much less talked about mark: with his third goal of the 2006 World Cup, Ronaldo became only the second player ever (Jürgen Klinsmann being the other) to score at least three goals in each of three World Cups. As of July 1, 2006, he had scored 62 goals in 97 international matches.[7]
Following the 2006 World Cup, Ronaldo had surgery on July 16, 2006, to remove calcifications from his left tibia.[8]
However, Ronaldo is now facing possible dismissal from his current club team, Real Madrid. According to all3points, a U.K. soccer news source, the head coach of Real, Fabio Capello, has warned Ronaldo that he had better get his act together if he wishes to remain on the team. Capello reportedly told Ronaldo, "I trust you and you are very important for this team, but I want you at your peak and very focused…There is no worth to me having a 50 percent Ronaldo." [citation needed]
Philanthropy
Ronaldo became a United Nations Development Programme Goodwill Ambassador in 2000. "No one should be doomed to a life of poverty, whether by birth or as a consequence of war," Ronaldo said.[9][10]
Honors and awards
Olympic medal record | ||
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Men’s Football | ||
Atlanta 1996 | Team Competition |
- FIFA World Player of the Year: 1996 (youngest winner), 1997, 2002
- European Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or): 1997, 2002
- UEFA Most Valuable Player - 1998
- BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality: 2002
- FIFA World Cup
- 2006 All-Time World Cup Goalscorer - 15 Goals
- 2006 Bronze Boot - Third Top Scorer 3 goals & 1 assist in 5 games
- 2002 Golden Boot - Top Scorer 8 goals
- 2002 Silver Ball - 2nd Best Player
- 2002 Winner
- 1998 Golden Ball - Best Player
- 1998 Runner-up
- 1994 Winner
- Brazilian Cup: Cruzeiro 1993
- Dutch Cup: PSV Eindhoven 1996
- Cup Winners' Cup: FC Barcelona 1997
- Confederations Cup: 1997
- Copa América: 1997, 1999
- UEFA Cup: Internazionale 1998
- Intercontinental Cup: Real Madrid 2002
- European Super Cup: Real Madrid 2002
- La Liga - Primera División champions: Real Madrid 2002/2003
- Spanish Super Cup: FC Barcelona 1996, Real Madrid 2003
Notes
- ^ "Player Page Profile - Ronaldo". fifaworldcup.yahoo.com. last update July 1, 2006. Retrieved 2006-08-08.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Andrew Downie (2006-03-11). "All is wrong with Ronaldo". Soccernet.
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(help) - ^ "Ronaldo's fit caused hotel panic". CNN/SI. 1998-07-15.
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(help) - ^ "Neurologist questions Ronaldo decision". CNN/SI. 1998-07-14.
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(help) - ^ "Ronaldo reportedly turns down offer from MLS". Associated Press. 2006-05-29.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ "Red Bull denies 120-million-dollar offer for Ronaldo". Agence France-Presse. 2006-05-30. Retrieved 2006-07-03.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Ronaldo player profile at the official 2006 FIFA World Cup site
- ^ Associated Press (July 15, 2006). "Brazil's Ronaldo has successful leg surgery".
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Soccer superstar fulfils poor boy’s promise" from the United Nations Development Programme site
- ^ Claire Doole (2000-02-01). "Ronaldo tackles global poverty". BBC. Retrieved 2006-07-05.
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External links
- 1976 births
- A1 Grand Prix people
- Afro-Brazilians
- BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality
- Brazilian footballers
- Brazilian Spaniards
- European Footballers of the Year
- FC Barcelona footballers
- FIFA 100
- FIFA World Cup goalscorers
- FIFA World Cup 1994 players
- FIFA World Cup 1998 players
- FIFA World Cup 2002 players
- FIFA World Cup 2006 players
- FIFA World Players of the Year
- Football (soccer) strikers
- Footballers at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Golden Shoe winners
- Internazionale players
- La Liga footballers
- Living people
- Olympic competitors for Brazil
- PSV Eindhoven footballers
- Real Madrid footballers
- Three-time FIFA World Players of the Year
- Two-time European Footballers of the Year
- FIFA World Cup-two time winning players
- Golden Ball winners
- Cruzeiro Esporte Clube players