'It's over': Cristiano Ronaldo's career to end with a whimper

By Marty Gleason / Roar Guru

On 31 December 2022, appropriately the last day of the old year and a contrived end of an era for all of us, I saw a headline that Cristiano Ronaldo had signed with Saudi Arabian club Al-Nassr.

In sporting terms I found this incredibly sad. Make no mistake, leaving Europe is an elite football player’s demise. It is Cristiano Ronaldo’s football death.

A champion unmourned?

Ronaldo doesn’t particularly have the personality to get an outside observer on his side, unless you admire his sheer work ethic, ultra-disciplined dedication and desire to be the best football player, probably at the expense of any real friendships.

He neither has the charm of namesake Ronaldo, nor the cool dude-ness of Kylian Mbappe or Neymar in his early years, or even the enigmatic detached introspection of Lionel Messi. Ronaldo has at times shown an inability to recognise either where his declining ability fits him into his teams of 2022, and in the past an inability to recognise the achievements of smaller teams in his path such as Iceland and Atletico Madrid.

But Ronaldo could also occasionally be an antidote to the machismo of the rest of the sporting world, refusing to get tattoos so that he could continue to donate blood and bone marrow to people in need.

On-field he has been an incredible champion, in longevity, sheer number of goals scored, his ability to bring three of his teams to the very top (Manchester United, Real Madrid and Portugal, the least likely of the three) and curiously, the only major star since perhaps Pele who was any good at using his head to score goals.

Spiritually I can hardly believe that it has ended like this for him. Unlike Lionel Messi circa 2016, I have never had cause to doubt Ronaldo’s credentials as a fighter. I figured they would have to cart him off a high-level European playing field in a casket aged 52.

At minimum I thought he would find a late-career challenge with a mid-level side such as his first club Sporting Lisbon, though this thought experiment requires an unrealistic lowering of salary in the real world.

I can hardly believe that anyone as rich and ambitious as him could be swayed by mere money. But both in the cases of him and Mbappe, I seem to be wrong.

Since winning the Champions League in his final game with Real Madrid in 2018, the last five club seasons have admittedly not gone so well for Ronaldo. Arguably the three-month pandemic pause in 2020 is a neat cut-off point after which he stopped being able to win elite matches singlehandedly.

Nonetheless, 2021 saw all of these events occur:

1) However dubious it is (or would be) to win a tournament Golden Boot via a bunch of penalties, Ronaldo was the Golden Boot winner for highest scorer of the European Championship played in June 2021.

2) Ronaldo, once again eternally alongside Messi (who transferred to PSG), was the highest-profile club transfer of the 2021 off-season, moving from Juventus to Manchester United.

(Photo by Oleg Bilsagaev/Getty Images)

3) He rescued four Champions League matches in a row for Manchester United with late goals from September-November 2021.

Since then, in 2022 the entire CR7 show has smacked straight into a wall.

First the decline happened to his clubs, then finally to him

Analyst Michael Cox summed up 2020s Ronaldo best when he reasoned that any team with him on it will start the match a goal up but a man down, as Ronaldo was guaranteed to score most matches but is too old to help with any defensive pressing.

While his league goal stats were a more than healthy 30 even in his last year with Juventus in 2021, Juve declined from heavily chasing Champions League titles from 2015-18 to being booted by Ajax, Lyon and Porto, a clear Tier B, in Ronaldo’s three years with them.

Eventually in 2022 the decline, hastened by Manchester United’s dreadful post-Sir Alex Ferguson dysfunction, spread from Ronaldo’s teams around him to his own game. Whatever the insipid city of Manchester turf wars, Ronaldo will bitterly regret not joining Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City in 2021 for one more attempt at what playing for an elite club feels like, under the guru of 21st century coaching and methodology.

In terms of the body’s mechanics, Ronaldo’s fall doesn’t necessarily surprise me. Even Roger Federer, slightly older than Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, could not keep pace with them forever, in the other sport where two or three stars have held onto the mantle for multiple generations.

Roger Federer (Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images for Laver Cup)

Stars often age in two ways. The types who rely heavily on their pace and athleticism to be stars suddenly fall off a cliff at a certain point of their careers, such as Thierry Henry, another who prematurely decamped from Europe to the USA aged 33. We are likely witnessing this phenomenon with Ronaldo, who while being an excellent dribbler and shooter, could in the past always count on his pace and magnificent leap.

Meanwhile those canny types who never relied on pace in the first place, such as Zinedine Zidane, Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Lionel Messi, could theoretically play on and on, floating into the right positions using sixth sense and picking their moments as Messi did in 2022.

Another way to look at things is that Ronaldo is 37, soon 38, with a two-year gap on Messi. Ronaldo arguably had two years as a star, 2007 and 2008, before Messi emerged at his level. We are perhaps witnessing the inverse two years of this.

Sports fans are loathe to admit any off-field hindering having any effect on a player’s on-field greatness. If they are good enough they will emerge from the ghetto to win three World Cups, we think.

To this day Johan Cruyff is accused of lacking bottle and ambition for not chasing the 1978 World Cup, while meanwhile saving his marriage. As well as Argentina played, perhaps a virus really did decide the 2022 World Cup against France. And then, there is also a chance the pain of losing a baby in April 2022 brought Cristiano Ronaldo down for good.

Legacy

Which brings us to the major career goal Ronaldo cares deeply about: his legacy. What has happened at the 2022 World Cup will set Messi above Ronaldo forever, when career-wise the two were still exactly neck-and-neck as recently as October 2022, both fading from the world scene in the 2020s in almost identical ways until two months ago.

Their last tussle that mattered was Messi holding up his shirt to the Bernabeu crowd in April 2017, or perhaps a 2-2 between the clubs a year later as Ronaldo was about to win a third-consecutive Champions League, inspiring me to briefly write his name first when listing the rivalry.

There was also one last irrelevant moment in late 2020, in front of empty stadiums while the rest of us were more concerned with lockdowns and vaccines. With Barcelona and Juventus in the same Champions League group, the two competed in their geriatric way by scoring some penalties for their declining clubs.

I once wrote an article for The Roar that suggested Messi and Ronaldo would be remembered as a tandem. That is not true now. Ronaldo’s 2022 World Cup was terrible, as he had lost the spring in his step to latch on the through balls of yesteryear.

This is easily contrasted with watching Messi picking his moments to stroll around the fields of Qatar, in his guise in midfield setting the pace of all his matches, putting in Argentina’s umpteen penalties and unbelievably lifting a gold trophy aged 35.

It was massively symbolic that when a Portugal coach finally found the gumption to drop Ronaldo from Portugal’s starting lineup in Qatar, young replacement forward Goncalo Ramos scored a hat-tr

(Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

But Ronaldo maintained a fanbase in the crowd, who collectively begged for his inclusion at the expense of that other hat-trick no-name who apparently no one cared about. It was perhaps also appropriate that the end came against Morocco, an unknown team that symbolised newness and beat Portugal on the back of youthful dynamism at the right moments.

I would argue that geo-politically, Portugal (population 10 million) achieving their first-ever major championship by winning Euro 2016 is a big an achievement as Argentina winning a World Cup. But the narrative will not back me up. Messi winning the World Cup aged 35, at his fifth and final attempt, with all of those goals and crazy assists, is the greatest football story of all time.

Ronaldo does have numbers. He has double the individual European Championship goals of almost any other player. He won three consecutive Champions Leagues, and five overall. He won them with two clubs, unlike Messi. He has all of those Ballons d’Or.

Yet the same Real Madrid side somehow also won one this year without him, albeit miraculously. Cristiano ripped through world football for two decades and for a while eclipsed the memory of his Brazilian namesake. But with the world momentarily in a World Cup mood, the Ronaldo vibe drifts back to the gap-toothed one in the yellow shirt.

Meanwhile, Cristiano is playing in Saudi Arabia. He is off the scene. It’s over. And we his fans don’t even get the benefit of realising that.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2023-01-07T11:33:34+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Messi got a bit too big for things and the game kept him around ;)

2023-01-06T07:06:08+00:00

BlouBul

Roar Rookie


When you get to big for the game the game will discard you.

2023-01-06T07:03:24+00:00

BlouBul

Roar Rookie


The Dutch has a cohesion problem. It is in our DNA.

AUTHOR

2023-01-05T21:35:02+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Neither outshine either, except Messi directly at WC 2022. For me their achievements are exactly even still. Ronaldo won UCL titles 5-3 (I don't count 2006 for Messi). Messi won direct leagues against each other 6-2 which is probably really the key stat. They each won one major international title. The 2021 Copa America was a pissweak tournament played for money in the middle of a pandemic that never should have happened. Argentina were also bang average in it.

AUTHOR

2023-01-05T10:04:50+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Yeah true, they really stuffed up 1990.

2023-01-05T09:43:08+00:00

max power

Guest


its probably less than half that. dont believe the media

2023-01-05T06:41:35+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


That's what boxer Floyd Mayweather says. He says " I have retired but got offered US$100m for 25 mins of wor, I'de be stupid not to take it. " Not to mention the media attention. Ronaldos doing a great service to the league he will be playing in, as Beckham did when he went to the USA. I expect USA men to be up there in future World Cups with their massive work rate as the game gets bigger and bigger there. Messis fans have had the time of their lives recently but that doesn't cut out the previous twenty years where Ronaldo has outshone him. Whatever, they are both great players.

2023-01-04T07:04:42+00:00

chris

Guest


Ronaldo was/is a complete freak. One of the greats and his move to the middle east will do nothing to tarnish his reputation. Check out these vids - to see what I mean. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoScYO2osb0 And the extended version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0k2ey_okQ4E

2023-01-04T06:58:11+00:00

chris

Guest


Marty not totally disagreeing but a Dutch team with Van Basten, Gullit, Koeman, Rijkaard (that won the '88 Euro) was world class.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T09:59:51+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


All good points. As many commenters here have mentioned, CR7's options were very limited, as Messi's were when he left Barcelona. For him it was PSG, Manchester City or bust. They have both at this point been priced out of the market. For me going to Saudi is a bizarre move, as Mbappe staying with PSG was also bizarre to me. What I perhaps overlook are players' particular motives with their careers. Simon Kuper wrote about this in his recent book about Barcelona. Ultimately not everyone's motive in their career is to be the best, as the pressure is overwhelming. Some just want to make a living. Maybe that's why there used to be premature retirements from the national teams, such as Totti and even Messi in 2016, briefly. But surely CR7's is to be the best, and compete with the best. He didn't strike me as self-aware enough to realise that he was finished. I got off topic, but thanks for the comment!

2023-01-03T08:44:33+00:00

Buddy

Roar Rookie


Can’t say I’ve ever been interested in the LM vs CR debate or anything similar really. Even worse is the comparison across generations which makes for such a subjective discussion that it just isn’t worthwhile. On the field we have enjoyed a huge amount of entertainment from someone who has been at the top of the sport for some years. We have enjoyed CR’s performances at different clubs and at different levels but we knew it would have to come to an end sooner or later and no different from those who passed before, transitioning from being at the very top to being a retired sportsperson is a far more difficult process than many imagine. Timing is incredibly important as is the pathway and It all gets muddled when you throw in personal pride, vanity and the need for publicity/to be in the headlines etc etc. In my dreams, I had C.R. Playing a few seasons somewhere he could do so much good to help improve and grow the game, raise its profile and enjoy hero status amongst young children aspiring to replace him in the world game. Playing in the MLS would have been perfectly acceptable as players such as Ibra and Beckham further back have taken their skills there and without doubt have raised the profile of the game to a level where now it has firm roots and a high level of support. Imagine what he could have brought to Australia? Bums on seats, a new sense of excitement, attracting young children to the local game and helping it grow, attending camps, player development as well as enjoying the climate as many players do when coming to the country. It didn’t have to be solely about financial reward surely? It’s a missed opportunity to leave a lasting legacy and an imprint on the game that probably won’t be achieved by his rival - who will be remembered more for finally lifting the World Cup. Even Pele, although acknowledged as one of “the greats” is loved and revered for his work after his playing career finished. Many people that have loved him never saw him play or perhaps only saw him in the twilight of his career. It is what he did beyond the grass rectangle that created the aura and love for the man. Maybe C.R. Still has time to change course but I can’t help feel that his current move is a missed opportunity.

2023-01-03T07:06:32+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


I think the Saudi move does have an impact on his legacy. It will be a sour ending after looking at his achievements with Manchester United, Real Madrid and (less so) with Juventus.

2023-01-03T05:05:08+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


How much is enough though? When you can sign a 300m contract it's hard to say no I guess.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:33:01+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Oh yeah, I hadn't thought of that. Any Asian CL game he played in Australia would be a huge drawcard.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:29:24+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Sure, but he's already got the money.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:28:19+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


How were Best, CR7, Eusebio, Yashin, even Van Basten ever going to win the World Cup, given the countries they are from? Talk about a rigged playing field. That should only be the marker if you're from Brazil/Argentina/Germany/France/Italy/England. Let's say 30 million population minimum with a good football culture and/or some money.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:23:49+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


I think Messi is a more complete player, but I also think that Messi simply plays to his level, and that level either wins or loses (eg Barca's multiple UCL capitulations). CR7 I thought was a better fighter who refused to accept losing or mediocrity.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:21:01+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


Is there any way for athletes of this financial level to play for peanuts after they've made their money? I think Dani Alves played for virtually nothing during the pandemic, though I'd have to look that one up.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:18:40+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


The achievements are written in stone. I don’t even think going to Saudi does anything to his legacy really. I’m just sad his European career is seemingly over. It was all so anticlimactic, unlike the climax that happened to Messi last month obviously.

AUTHOR

2023-01-03T04:16:34+00:00

Marty Gleason

Roar Guru


I disagree, in my humble opinion the 2008 Man U Champs League win was hugely Ronaldo's team and Ronaldo's win. The four Real Madrid Champs Leagues from 2014-18 he was scoring buckets of goals, like 15 per Champions League season. They are not winning three in a row without him. I'd even say those were a one-man team, Real collapsed without him in 2019. But then, he immediately won nothing further without Real. They helped each other to a degree, Ronaldo helping Real more than the opposite.

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