|
| Did you know that his debut
by Manchester United happened against Bolton on 16th August 2003 with a
great exhibition? |
|
| |
| |
| |
|
Cristiano Ronaldo spoke
exclusively with World Soccer earlier this year - and heres the
interview in full.....
World Soccer: You could be the first player to win a clean sweep of
Golden Shoe, Ballon d'Or and the FIFA World Player of the Year awards.
How does that feel?
Ronaldo: It's wonderful to win the Golden Shoe, it's a great honour.
Especially because my position is a winger. Normally strikers win this
award so it's amazing for me to be part of it and to be mentioned
alongside the great players. As regards the decision of FIFA, I'm not
worrying about that too much. I feel very good to win the Golden Shoe,
I'm very happy.
World Soccer: If you had to choose somebody, who would be the best
player in the world right now?
Ronaldo: Cristiano Ronaldo! No, not really! I don't know. Last season I
was one of the most consistent players in Europe; this is why I am so
comfortable. I've now won the Golden Shoe and UEFA voted me the best
player in last season's Champions League. It's been amazing. You have a
lot of great players in the world, but I was the most regular player
last season.
World Soccer: What are the remaining ambitions in your career?
Ronaldo: I'm looking to be one of the best players ever. I'm only 23
years old, I've got lots of years left. I want to be remembered as part
of the group of the greatest players ever to win awards, to win
trophies, to win medals. And I want to keep going like that. I feel
good, I feel in good shape and I want to win -- and not just this
season but every season.
World Soccer: So does your club come before your country?
Ronaldo: I want both things. With Manchester [United] to win the
Champions League again and the League and, of course, for Portugal to
win something important like the Euros. It's not just my dream, it's
Portugal's dream as well. We have a good spirit, we have good players,
but you need to take your opportunity. You need that to win a big
trophy. It's difficult but I think it's possible.
World Soccer: You wanted to receive the Golden Shoe here in Madeira.
What makes Madeira so special for you?
Ronaldo: Well, I was born here, my whole family is from here. So it's
always special for me to come to Madeira to see my family, to see my
friends, to see everybody, and I always said that if I ever had the
opportunity I would chose Madeira because it is my place, this is where
I was born. ESM gave me the opportunity to choose [where I received the
award] and of course I chose Madeira. It's beautiful, the people are
nice and I feel very proud of Madeira.
World Soccer: Do you think you will come back here to live when you
retire?
Ronaldo: Of course. My whole family is here. My mum lives here, my
sisters, it's a great place, I love to come here. I don't have many
opportunities to come but when I do, I love it. The weather, the
people, the water, everything is fantastic. I arrived here yesterday
from Manchester where the weather was very bad. When you arrive you
notice the difference. It's a lovely place, not just because I was born
here.
World Soccer: It seems Portugal and United have missed you. Is that
true?
Ronaldo: I don't think so. Some people have been saying that Manchester
and Portugal lose because they don't have Cristiano, but last season,
we started badly in the Premier League and I played. I wanted to come
back quickly to help my teammates, to help my team. I love to play
football and when I'm not playing I feel very, very bad. Football is
like that sometimes: You win sometimes and you lose sometimes. This is
life, you learn from that. I believe we can win the Champions League
and the league again because we have a great team and great players.
Portugal is also the same. I want to come back for the Portugal
national team but I think the qualifying campaign is long and we have
the opportunity to do a great job.
"The Portugese Ronaldo"
Portugal Captain
World Soccer: Portugal has had many great players since Eusébio
-- such as Fernando Gomes and Luís Figo -- but nobody has
emulated him. Are you prepared for a time when you might be considered
Portugal's greatest player?
Ronaldo: Of course it's important to represent my country well, but I
don't need to be compared with any other players. It's amazing to be
compared with these great players you mentioned but I want to be part
of world football -- not just in Portugal because I am already part of
Portuguese football. I want more. My ambition is to win more things and
stay part of history after I have stopped playing. If I can keep going
like that, things will keep coming naturally.
World Soccer: You left Madeira at an early age. Was it hard for you to
leave home so young?
Ronaldo: I left my family at the age of 11 or 12. That was a very
difficult time for me. Now, nothing is a problem for me. When I moved
to Manchester at 18, I didn't speak the language but it was no problem
because I had experience [in Lisbon], so when I arrived there, it was
not so difficult for me. My adaptation was not easy, but it was a good
adaptation. It's always difficult when you're young and you have many
things to learn and I am always wanting to learn. This is why I like to
learn. I don't know everything about football or about my mentality. I
want to learn all the time. Last season I had a great season, this
season I will try to do better if it's possible.
World Soccer: How long did it take for you to settle in Manchester?
Have you now reached a point where you are comfortable there?
Ronaldo: I feel happy in Manchester. My challenge is always to do
better than I did the previous season. I'm quite happy there, I like
the league, I like the club, but sometimes you want different things in
life. You want new challenges. I don't say I want a new challenge this
season, but it's always good for your mind, for your career, to have
other things to do and other things to win. This is what I try to do.
If I stay in Manchester, I try to do the same, I try to win the
trophies again.
World Soccer: What was your dream when you were a child?
Ronaldo: When I started in Madeira, my mission was always to be a
professional footballer, but I never dreamed I would be at Manchester
United at 18 years old. It was amazing for me. But my ambition is
always to play well. I remember when I was young the opportunities came
along and I took them. I moved to Nacional and I played a few years
there -- two years -- and then I went to Sporting and the opportunities
kept coming. And when I arrived in Manchester everything happened very
quickly.
World Soccer: Your life has changed incredibly over the past 10 years.
How do you cope?
Ronaldo: Well, it's been change for the good. When you change in a bad
way it's more difficult. My house is better than 10 years ago, but this
doesn't change my character, my mentality, my ambitions. I'm still the
same, whether I've got one million in the bank or nothing. My
personality is still the same: it's to play football, to enjoy my life.
This is what I try to do all the time, to enjoy life. Not because I
have more money than I did 10 years ago. I don't change anything.
World Soccer: What do you think you would have done if you had not
become a footballer? Did you have a "Plan B" as a child?
Ronaldo: That's a difficult question. My ambition, my focus, has always
been on football. When I was 5, 6, 7, I always asked my mum for a
football as a present. It was never a bike or computers or Game Boys. I
never asked for any of that. It was always a football, just a football.
So my ambition was always to be a professional footballer. This is why
I think I am like that. I don't know what I will do in the future. My
focus has always been football.
World Soccer: Is the ball still a toy? Or has it become a working tool?
Ronaldo: No -- it's still a toy!
World Soccer: It is clear that you are very close to your family. How
much of your success as a footballer is down to their support?
Ronaldo: I've had support from my whole family. If my family hadn't
supported me when I went to Lisbon at age of 11 then I wouldn't now be
Cristiano Ronaldo the professional footballer. My mum gave me that
opportunity. My father and my sister said if you want this opportunity
to improve your life, try it. Maybe another family would have said no,
stay here, you're young, you have to stay here with your brothers, with
us. It's quite a difficult situation. I have to say my family gave me
all their support, they've helped me a lot, in good times and bad
times. That's why I'm here now.
World Soccer: Do you need to have a mental strength to cope with life
as a professional footballer?
Ronaldo: You have to be strong mentally. When I arrived in Lisbon, for
the first year I cried every week, but that's why I say my family
helped me a lot. People from Sporting, my friends, directors, everyone
helped me. I'm always focused on doing well in life and many people
have helped me and that's why I'm where I am today.
World Soccer: Is life easier or harder playing for a club like
Manchester United?
Ronaldo: Well, it's always good to play with great players. Manchester
has a lot of great players. To be honest, I think you just try to do
your best to help Manchester. For me every season is a new challenge.
Five years ago I arrived in Manchester and I played well. Then the next
season I played better; the third season better still. I've always
tried to improve every season. This season I will try to do the same.
It will be difficult because last season I scored so many goals and won
a few things. If you have good players around you it helps. I think I
am with the right club at the moment. I play with the right players.
Everything is natural. I want to win again.
World Soccer: Did you keep an eye on the Golden Shoe rankings last
season?
Ronaldo: At the start of the season, I wasn't thinking about it. My
focus wasn't just to score goals. I looked to help my team first, to
win things. If the goals came, then great. But when I started scoring,
the goals kept coming, so in the middle of the season I started
thinking that this was a great opportunity to win the Golden Shoe. The
goals kept coming, the wins kept coming. My teammates helped a lot
because without them it would have been impossible to score the goals.
World Soccer: But were you watching the other leading players in the
competition by the end of the season?
Ronaldo: Yeah, of course! I spent a lot of time watching other games.
But I had a lead over the other guys so I was quite relaxed during the
last few games.
World Soccer: You're like a rock star these days. Does fame bother you?
Ronaldo: I never think about it. Over the last three years, my life has
changed a lot. All over the world people know me, they recognize me.
One aspect is good, it's nice. But some aspects are not so good. People
watch everything you do. You have to stay on your guard all the time.
It's quite difficult because of that. But I have to think about my
career. This is the most important thing for me. I don't care what
people say about things outside of football. This doesn't matter. About
football, yes I care, because that is what I love to do. Football is my
career and it's always nice when people say nice things about you but,
to be honest, it's not difficult to be famous.
World Soccer: Do you ever see yourself starring in the movies?
Ronaldo: Oh yeah, well maybe in the future! [Laughs] I have talents
other than just football! People don't know about them, but I do!
World Soccer: You've just had your first serious injury. Last year, the
Belgian goalkeeper Stijn Stijnen said he would try to break your legs.
Ronaldo: Yes, he tried to intimidate me. But it was no problem because
I scored two goals!
World Soccer: Have you ever been intimidated by an opposing player?
Ronaldo: To be honest, I'm never afraid of football. Of some other
things, yes, I am afraid, but in football, I'm not afraid of anything.
World Soccer: But it does happen quite a lot doesn't it?
Ronaldo: It's normal. The papers try to talk about it but it doesn't
work on me. My focus is always to play well. When I step onto the
pitch, I switch my mind on and I don't think about what people say
about me. If they say that Cristiano Ronaldo doesn't defend, I don't
think about them. I try to concentrate on my own job.
World Soccer: You have mentioned your family, but who else has been
important in your career?
Ronaldo: Everyone. Every coach has helped me. The players, the
directors, my friends -- they have all helped me and made me what I am
today.
World Soccer: Was it important for you to have Portuguese people such
as Carlos Queiroz with you in Manchester?
Ronaldo: When I arrived there, nobody spoke Portuguese. Now, nine or 10
players can speak Portuguese. There are some Brazilians, some from
Angola. It's nice to hear Portuguese on the pitch, in the gym. It's
always nice.
World Soccer: Are there lots of different languages spoken in the
dressing room at Manchester United?
Ronaldo: Most of the players speak English. It's only me, Nani and
Anderson who speak Portuguese regularly. We can make fun of the English
because they don't speak Portuguese!
World Soccer: Sometimes defenders get upset when you make fun of them
on the pitch. Is it part of your character to show that you are a top
player?
Ronaldo: I've always played like that. You didn't get an opportunity to
see me when I was 6, 7, 8 years old. Some people who knew me then say
it's the same Cristiano. I like to dribble, to run with the ball. Maybe
some people think I do that because I'm a joker but this is my style,
this is what I try to do, this is what I like to do. I like to dribble,
this is my type of footballer. Some other players have a different
style but I've always been like that. I know some defenders get angry
with me and try to kill me on the pitch. That's normal in football.
(in World Soccer magazine
home
|
|