ALL Ronaldo's future/comments/speculation

Status
Not open for further replies.
From day one I have believed all this gesturing for the press is really fighting over Transfer Price.

Now Real Madrid are saying its a Problem between Club and player - ie. Transfer should not be massive.
 
Anyone else sick of reading about this cnut?

Feeding his fecking ego that's what we are doing.
 
"If the two resolve this situation and Manchester United want to call us then we will be happy and delighted with them because Cristiano is a great player.

"We can't say anything more, we only talk about our own footballers and Cristiano is Manchester United's."

However, Calderon did admit Ronaldo's comments, in which he signalled his intention to "take advantage of a great opportunity", may have swung the pendulum in Real's favour.

"If the kid keeps himself in that strong position, the step he has taken could be key," added the Real chief.

Real are spineless bastards. Just put in the offer. Of course not - they're going to try and get Ron to push the sale price down by pissing off everybody at the club.

And that's why United shouldn't sell him.

It's also why Ron should be very cynical about anything that Madrid tell him - doubtless Queiroz (and maybe even Mendes) have told him that. Somebody should slip some subliminal messages into his iPod while he's having that foot surgery. Nah, forget that - I bet Calderon sent him some tracks for Christmas.
 
Bolton's a great place. Almost as good as Ashton.

That said, I don't really agree with you. Lifestyle anywhere depends on how much cash you have(as side from the weather). I bet most people in India would love to live abroad, but I doubt the vast majority of multi millionaires in Bombay would even consider it.

can't speak much for the wealthy of bombay (my mum's from madras/south indian) but you've just underlined my point.

even though there are plenty of better places to live than bombay, multi-millionaires who originate from there would probably not consider moving.

ronaldo's background is iberian. he knows he can have the same wealth and prestige by moving to la liga. so why wouldn't he move back.

here in the US, some of my parent's friends (indians/aussies/etc) have made lots of money in the US but then choose to return back to their home countries with their wealth and experiences knowing that they can get a similar position/job which pays somewhat similar, relative to living standards of that particular nation in question. why do they go back? because they miss the culture, the togetherness of likeminded people, etc.
 
Sell him

Disrespectful little cnut, I don't care how many goals he scores next season

As big a cnut as Heinze

And I am removing him from the favourite player thing in my profile
 
Can you imagine Fergie giving Ronaldo some of that? Oh how I'd love it. Absolutely love it :lol:

 
Don't know if its been posted but.

First of all a little story to tell you what kind of man we are talking about. It is January 9, 2008, and in an upstairs room at Manchester United's training ground five elderly men in smart blazers are struggling with their emotions in front of a hushed audience. It is the club's media day building up to the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster and Sir Bobby Charlton's polite smile does not hide the fact he is trembling as he takes his seat. Bill Foulkes is straight-backed and dignified but only a couple of questions have been asked before the tears appear in his eyes and he reaches for a glass of water.

In an adjacent room Wayne Rooney has agreed to offer a modern-day perspective of that seminal day when 23 people, including eight members of Sir Matt Busby's team, were killed in the wreckage of the burnt-out BEA Elizabethan. It is not his specialist subject but he handles the occasion with dignity and more eloquence than some people might imagine. But then Cristiano Ronaldo comes through the double doors and the mood is broken.

He is wearing a white suit jacket and ripped jeans, looking every bit the boy-band hunk, but it is very obvious he is in a bad mood. He begins by berating Karen Shotbolt, the club's press officer, because he is waiting for Rooney and the event has over-run. He is banging his watch with his hand, flapping his arms and gesturing in the way that Portuguese footballers usually reserve for fussy referees and, at first, he is so animated it appears as if it might be a wind-up.

When he flounces back through the doors, cursing loudly, it is very obvious he is being deadly serious. Rooney is professional enough to carry on with his tribute but the attention is no longer exclusively on him. Thirty seconds later Ronaldo appears again, first rapping his forefinger against the glass in the door, then opening it by a fraction and starting to whistle at Rooney in the way that a farmer beckons his sheepdog.

It was such an unpleasant scene the journalists decided not to write about it because we had been invited to the training ground to cover a far more important subject and, when you have sat with men as noble as Charlton, Foulkes, Albert Scanlon, Harry Gregg and Kenny Morgans and seen the hurt in their eyes, it felt incongruous to veer off-track. But coming away from Carrington that day it was difficult not to wonder what had become of the pimply teenager with the braces on his teeth who had been photographed, in his first few weeks as a United player, holding hands with his mother, Dolores, as they crossed a busy Manchester street.

The answer, of course, is that Ronaldo has fallen in love with his own reflection and, as United are currently finding out, that ego is in danger of spiralling out of control. Nor, sadly, is this story a one-off. One member of staff at Old Trafford reports being shocked by his rudeness when sorting out his travel arrangements for a club trip last season. And then there was last season's Football Writers' Association's annual dinner when, with barely any notice, its player of the year demanded that space was made for five of his friends to attend and that he would like them all to be on the top table with him. He got his way, as superstars often do, but the organisers were unimpressed, to say the least.

This is not to say that Ronaldo is all bad. He won a court case against the Sun earlier this week after it was reported that he had been fined for breaking club rules by using his phone during training: a story that was obvious baloney to anyone who has followed the player's career. Ronaldo, in many ways, is the consummate professional when it comes to improving himself on the pitch. He is not a man for nightclubs or raucous evenings out among the Manchester glitterati and there is something deeply impressive about the way he has come from his humble beginnings, growing up in Madeira in a house so small the washing machine was on the roof, to become the most penetrative attacking footballer in the world.

And yet United's more loyal and thoughtful supporters would by now be entitled to think it would be better for Sir Alex Ferguson and the Glazer family to end this shabby saga and let the previously unthinkable happen. To them, his constant prevaricating about his future, his flirting with the Spanish media and his apparent disregard for Manchester United, must smack of a man who has started to think he is bigger than the club.

His sound bites have become increasingly strategic, as if he thinks we cannot see what he is doing, yet nobody will have been surprised that the sweat had barely dried on his brow after Portugal's defeat by Germany on Thursday before he had re-iterated his desire to leave Old Trafford - just as Real Madrid had requested. United insist they will not allow themselves to be bullied into a corner but, when a player is acting like this and would so obviously be resentful and unsettled if he is denied the transfer he craves, the question should be: what is the point in keeping him?

Guardian:

Good article
 
If that article's true, Ronaldo can get fecked.

As i've said, he's nowhere near players like Robson, Cantona etc.

All out for himself.
 
Sell him

Disrespectful little cnut, I don't care how many goals he scores next season

As big a cnut as Heinze

And I am removing him from the favourite player thing in my profile



Even if the fecker stays, he'll always be a crunt in my eyes.

Remember the jeer's and boo's Rio got over his contract stalling, well just wait, If Ronaldo turns out for United, the shit Rio got will sound like praise to what Ronaldo has let himself in for.......it'll all end it tears for the stupid twat !
 
Yep.

He's taking the piss.

Not fit to lace Robson, Cantrona etc boots at Utd.

He's disrespecting the club and everyone associated with it.

It's as though the club means nothing, represents nothing and isn't prestigious enough for him.

It's unbelievable how a kid who came from nothing can act like this.

I've had enough, I couldn't care less if he goes now. I've always frowned upon the circus a single player can bring to the club. I loved Beckham immensely as a player but the attention he got spiraled out of control. I detest the fact so much time and energy is placed on 1 single person at a club like united who is filled with great players. We are bigger and better then one person. If he knew his history at all he would know not to act like a twat.

Great players have come and gone and the club, believe it or not, gets stronger. If he is doing this to score a greater contract then he has another thing coming. I would hope the club would stay firm in their propositions. Otherwise, goodbye, and I mean that.
 
I knew the cnut was angling for a move a month ago.

His interview which is doing the rounds has said that he does not care about what Ferguson says. He says he wants our doctors to do his op. He can feck off. Let them in Madrid do it. He also said he made his mind up before the European Cup final. Why say "I stay" in the after match interview then? The prick almost cost us with his ridiculous penalty. Off we go Ronaldo. I hope you career goes rapidly downhill. The knob is due a decent long term injury.

feck off you greaseball bastard.
 
Don't know if its been posted but.

First of all a little story to tell you what kind of man we are talking about. It is January 9, 2008, and in an upstairs room at Manchester United's training ground five elderly men in smart blazers are struggling with their emotions in front of a hushed audience. It is the club's media day building up to the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster and Sir Bobby Charlton's polite smile does not hide the fact he is trembling as he takes his seat. Bill Foulkes is straight-backed and dignified but only a couple of questions have been asked before the tears appear in his eyes and he reaches for a glass of water.

In an adjacent room Wayne Rooney has agreed to offer a modern-day perspective of that seminal day when 23 people, including eight members of Sir Matt Busby's team, were killed in the wreckage of the burnt-out BEA Elizabethan. It is not his specialist subject but he handles the occasion with dignity and more eloquence than some people might imagine. But then Cristiano Ronaldo comes through the double doors and the mood is broken.

He is wearing a white suit jacket and ripped jeans, looking every bit the boy-band hunk, but it is very obvious he is in a bad mood. He begins by berating Karen Shotbolt, the club's press officer, because he is waiting for Rooney and the event has over-run. He is banging his watch with his hand, flapping his arms and gesturing in the way that Portuguese footballers usually reserve for fussy referees and, at first, he is so animated it appears as if it might be a wind-up.

When he flounces back through the doors, cursing loudly, it is very obvious he is being deadly serious. Rooney is professional enough to carry on with his tribute but the attention is no longer exclusively on him. Thirty seconds later Ronaldo appears again, first rapping his forefinger against the glass in the door, then opening it by a fraction and starting to whistle at Rooney in the way that a farmer beckons his sheepdog.

It was such an unpleasant scene the journalists decided not to write about it because we had been invited to the training ground to cover a far more important subject and, when you have sat with men as noble as Charlton, Foulkes, Albert Scanlon, Harry Gregg and Kenny Morgans and seen the hurt in their eyes, it felt incongruous to veer off-track. But coming away from Carrington that day it was difficult not to wonder what had become of the pimply teenager with the braces on his teeth who had been photographed, in his first few weeks as a United player, holding hands with his mother, Dolores, as they crossed a busy Manchester street.

The answer, of course, is that Ronaldo has fallen in love with his own reflection and, as United are currently finding out, that ego is in danger of spiralling out of control. Nor, sadly, is this story a one-off. One member of staff at Old Trafford reports being shocked by his rudeness when sorting out his travel arrangements for a club trip last season. And then there was last season's Football Writers' Association's annual dinner when, with barely any notice, its player of the year demanded that space was made for five of his friends to attend and that he would like them all to be on the top table with him. He got his way, as superstars often do, but the organisers were unimpressed, to say the least.

This is not to say that Ronaldo is all bad. He won a court case against the Sun earlier this week after it was reported that he had been fined for breaking club rules by using his phone during training: a story that was obvious baloney to anyone who has followed the player's career. Ronaldo, in many ways, is the consummate professional when it comes to improving himself on the pitch. He is not a man for nightclubs or raucous evenings out among the Manchester glitterati and there is something deeply impressive about the way he has come from his humble beginnings, growing up in Madeira in a house so small the washing machine was on the roof, to become the most penetrative attacking footballer in the world.

And yet United's more loyal and thoughtful supporters would by now be entitled to think it would be better for Sir Alex Ferguson and the Glazer family to end this shabby saga and let the previously unthinkable happen. To them, his constant prevaricating about his future, his flirting with the Spanish media and his apparent disregard for Manchester United, must smack of a man who has started to think he is bigger than the club.

His sound bites have become increasingly strategic, as if he thinks we cannot see what he is doing, yet nobody will have been surprised that the sweat had barely dried on his brow after Portugal's defeat by Germany on Thursday before he had re-iterated his desire to leave Old Trafford - just as Real Madrid had requested. United insist they will not allow themselves to be bullied into a corner but, when a player is acting like this and would so obviously be resentful and unsettled if he is denied the transfer he craves, the question should be: what is the point in keeping him?

Guardian:

Good article

Utterly detestable. Fancy behaving like that with the whole Munich issue so salient at the time.
 
it not just the weather mate. the culture, attitude, lifestyle, etc. once you experience living for extended periods of time in vastly different areas, you understand that its more than 'just the weather'.

not saying cheshire isn't a great place. it is a top notch place. however i can totally understand people who would dislike it for more than just the weather compared to an area that is closer to their upbringing/background.

Bolton's a great place. Almost as good as Ashton.

That said, I don't really agree with you. Lifestyle anywhere depends on how much cash you have(as side from the weather). I bet most people in India would love to live abroad, but I doubt the vast majority of multi millionaires in Bombay would even consider it.

You are right! Did you know Bombay has more $ millionaires than NYC?!
 
You are right! Did you know Bombay has more $ millionaires than NYC?!

that argument supports my view. natives of bombay, regardless of how wealthy, would chose to stay in bombay...it is where they are brought up, where their families are, the language and culture is what is closest to them

ronaldo can have the same wealth, if not more in madrid, he can have the same prestige (madrid are a big club, lets not be petty and belittle their history...though i hate that fascist dirty club of theirs), and live in a place that is closer to his upbringing.

just like natives of bombay who are wealthy wouldn't leave, why would'nt ronaldo go to somewhere, where he feels his life would be better?
 
I think your observation is right Sultan, I'm not sure what that says about either us and thos who didn't turn quicker. I think perhaps we felt the pain quicker, and we understood precisely what was going on, we've probably been around the game a lot longer than some who follow United on here. Though even my position has changed, previously I saw it as no lose either way should he stay or go; now the way he's undermining Fergusons authority I struggle to see how he stays

I'd absolutely fecking love it if he did stay and was rooted to the bench for the first half of the season. Teach the bastard a bit of humility... though I doubt anyone or anything is capable of that

Just about sums up where I have reached.
 
I don't see the point of having a player at the club who doesn't wasn't to be there.

Exactly.

We are seeing the drawbacks of buying players from the Iberian peninsula now though. Many forecast that Rooney would be a bigger player for United than Ronaldo and this is proving to be true.

As an aside, the loss of Ferdinand would have a more pronounced effect than Ronaldo.
 
I don't see the point of having a player at the club who doesn't wasn't to be there.

this i agree. the question is what is the best exit strategy for the club.

after all, if we wanted him out ASAP and that was our only objective we could just terminate his contract and let him walk on a free, but that's not exactly beneficial for the club, is it?

the club/fergie will have to figure out transfer strategy, timelines, costs, fees, etc that is most beneficial for united going forward and this takes lots of time and thought.
 
that argument supports my view. natives of bombay, regardless of how wealthy, would chose to stay in bombay...it is where they are brought up, where their families are, the language and culture is what is closest to them

ronaldo can have the same wealth, if not more in madrid, he can have the same prestige (madrid are a big club, lets not be petty and belittle their history...though i hate that fascist dirty club of theirs), and live in a place that is closer to his upbringing.

just like natives of bombay who are wealthy wouldn't leave, why would'nt ronaldo go to somewhere, where he feels his life would be better?

errr... cos he's not from Madrid .... :nono: FFS, he's not even from Spain!! :rolleyes:

Those who dont understand that are equally culturally culpable!! Portugal & Spain are 2 very different countries with differing cultures! As different as Brazil & Argentina. Or France or Germany. and nothing like England & Scotland where we share a language and a common government and look at how different we are ... enough so for a proud Scot like SAF to say he will never ever manage England!

You are so 'off logic' its not funny! Lets not excuse Ronaldo's behaviour as being about culture. If he wants out, he can feck off, but do not pretend he is anything but a Class A cnut devoid of class and character.

Mourinho was spot on in his character analysis. You cant buy class and manners ... its bred into you by your parents and your upbringing. Our Ronnie has neither.
 
this i agree. the question is what is the best exit strategy for the club.

after all, if we wanted him out ASAP and that was our only objective we could just terminate his contract and let him walk on a free, but that's not exactly beneficial for the club, is it?

the club/fergie will have to figure out transfer strategy, timelines, costs, fees, etc that is most beneficial for united going forward and this takes lots of time and thought.

The strategy is...

... if Madrid want him, they are going to have to pay through the nose for him. For once, we should come out of a sale having absolutely raped the other club.
 
Exactly.

We are seeing the drawbacks of buying players from the Iberian peninsula now though. Many forecast that Rooney would be a bigger player for United than Ronaldo and this is proving to be true.

As an aside, the loss of Ferdinand would have a more pronounced effect than Ronaldo.


agreed. i am not too worried about theis ronaldo stuff.

however two years ago when rio was meeting with kenyon and rumours were abound that he could go back down south, i was shitting myself. did not want to lose rio in a million years. many supporters wanted him gone, but not me. i was hoping 110% that rio stayed. don't feel that same fear/hope for ronaldo.
 
errr... cos he's not from Madrid .... :nono: FFS, he's not even from Spain!! :rolleyes:

Those who dont understand that are equally culturally culpable!! Portugal & Spain are 2 very different countries with differing cultures! As different as Brazil & Argentina. Or France or Germany. and nothing like England & Scotland where we share a language and a common government and look at how different we are ... enough so for a proud Scot like SAF to say he will never ever manage England!

You are so 'off logic' its not funny!

not ssaying they are same cultures.

however portugual and spain etc have more in common than portugal has with the uk. no one is saying its like for like. it is the degree of differentiation between the 3.
 
Don't know if its been posted but.

First of all a little story to tell you what kind of man we are talking about. It is January 9, 2008, and in an upstairs room at Manchester United's training ground five elderly men in smart blazers are struggling with their emotions in front of a hushed audience. It is the club's media day building up to the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster and Sir Bobby Charlton's polite smile does not hide the fact he is trembling as he takes his seat. Bill Foulkes is straight-backed and dignified but only a couple of questions have been asked before the tears appear in his eyes and he reaches for a glass of water.

In an adjacent room Wayne Rooney has agreed to offer a modern-day perspective of that seminal day when 23 people, including eight members of Sir Matt Busby's team, were killed in the wreckage of the burnt-out BEA Elizabethan. It is not his specialist subject but he handles the occasion with dignity and more eloquence than some people might imagine. But then Cristiano Ronaldo comes through the double doors and the mood is broken.

He is wearing a white suit jacket and ripped jeans, looking every bit the boy-band hunk, but it is very obvious he is in a bad mood. He begins by berating Karen Shotbolt, the club's press officer, because he is waiting for Rooney and the event has over-run. He is banging his watch with his hand, flapping his arms and gesturing in the way that Portuguese footballers usually reserve for fussy referees and, at first, he is so animated it appears as if it might be a wind-up.

When he flounces back through the doors, cursing loudly, it is very obvious he is being deadly serious. Rooney is professional enough to carry on with his tribute but the attention is no longer exclusively on him. Thirty seconds later Ronaldo appears again, first rapping his forefinger against the glass in the door, then opening it by a fraction and starting to whistle at Rooney in the way that a farmer beckons his sheepdog.

It was such an unpleasant scene the journalists decided not to write about it because we had been invited to the training ground to cover a far more important subject and, when you have sat with men as noble as Charlton, Foulkes, Albert Scanlon, Harry Gregg and Kenny Morgans and seen the hurt in their eyes, it felt incongruous to veer off-track. But coming away from Carrington that day it was difficult not to wonder what had become of the pimply teenager with the braces on his teeth who had been photographed, in his first few weeks as a United player, holding hands with his mother, Dolores, as they crossed a busy Manchester street.

The answer, of course, is that Ronaldo has fallen in love with his own reflection and, as United are currently finding out, that ego is in danger of spiralling out of control. Nor, sadly, is this story a one-off. One member of staff at Old Trafford reports being shocked by his rudeness when sorting out his travel arrangements for a club trip last season. And then there was last season's Football Writers' Association's annual dinner when, with barely any notice, its player of the year demanded that space was made for five of his friends to attend and that he would like them all to be on the top table with him. He got his way, as superstars often do, but the organisers were unimpressed, to say the least.

This is not to say that Ronaldo is all bad. He won a court case against the Sun earlier this week after it was reported that he had been fined for breaking club rules by using his phone during training: a story that was obvious baloney to anyone who has followed the player's career. Ronaldo, in many ways, is the consummate professional when it comes to improving himself on the pitch. He is not a man for nightclubs or raucous evenings out among the Manchester glitterati and there is something deeply impressive about the way he has come from his humble beginnings, growing up in Madeira in a house so small the washing machine was on the roof, to become the most penetrative attacking footballer in the world.

And yet United's more loyal and thoughtful supporters would by now be entitled to think it would be better for Sir Alex Ferguson and the Glazer family to end this shabby saga and let the previously unthinkable happen. To them, his constant prevaricating about his future, his flirting with the Spanish media and his apparent disregard for Manchester United, must smack of a man who has started to think he is bigger than the club.

His sound bites have become increasingly strategic, as if he thinks we cannot see what he is doing, yet nobody will have been surprised that the sweat had barely dried on his brow after Portugal's defeat by Germany on Thursday before he had re-iterated his desire to leave Old Trafford - just as Real Madrid had requested. United insist they will not allow themselves to be bullied into a corner but, when a player is acting like this and would so obviously be resentful and unsettled if he is denied the transfer he craves, the question should be: what is the point in keeping him?

Guardian:

Good article

Wonder what it was he needed to do that was so important he acted like a horrible cnut on an issue which the club holds so dear to their hearts and have remembered for 50 years.

Horrible, Horrible human being. :nono:

Wonder how Rooney managed to bite his tongue and remain friends with him after that...

Kind of puts things into perspective now too... can you blame Ruud for having a fall out with him? Obviously not appropriate to hit him with the 'father' issue etc but theres so much you can take from a self loving cnut who is the only person in the locker room with a mirror... christ :rolleyes: Little faggot.
 
Are we sure he really told what we are being told he told?
 
errr... cos he's not from Madrid .... :nono: FFS, he's not even from Spain!! :rolleyes:

Those who dont understand that are equally culturally culpable!! Portugal & Spain are 2 very different countries with differing cultures! As different as Brazil & Argentina. Or France or Germany. and nothing like England & Scotland where we share a language and a common government and look at how different we are ... enough so for a proud Scot like SAF to say he will never ever manage England!

You are so 'off logic' its not funny! Lets not excuse Ronaldo's behaviour as being about culture. If he wants out, feck off, but do not pretend he is anything but a Class A cnut.

never once did i comment on my opinion on his character.

most people on here think sharpey is a 'twat'. i've met him a few times and he's a top class lad.

it is obvious that ronaldo wants to leave, we all knew it was going to happen at some point. atleast hehasn't explicity put in a transfer request, because that would hurt our negotiations when it comes to a fee.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.