Personal information
Full name:Ronaldo de Assis Moreira
Date of birth:
March 21,
1980 (1980-03-21) (age 28)
Place of birth:
Porto Alegre,
BrazilHeight:1.81 m (5 ft 11+1⁄2 in)
Playing position:
Attacking midfielder [1]Ronaldo de Assis Moreira (born
March 21,
1980 in
Porto Alegre), commonly known as Ronaldinho or Ronaldinho Gaucho
[2], is a
Brazilian footballer who plays for
Serie A side
AC Milan and the
Brazil national team.
Ronaldinho, meaning "little Ronaldo," is better known in Brazil by the nickname Ronaldinho Gaúcho, in order to distinguish him from
Ronaldo, who was already called "Ronaldinho" in Brazil. Ronaldo simply went by his first name upon his move to Europe, thereby allowing Ronaldinho to drop the "Gaúcho" and remain simply as Ronaldinho.
Among his many achievements and accolades, Ronaldinho is a two-time winner of the
FIFA World Player of the Year,
European Footballer of the Year and
FIFPro World Player of the Year awards.
[3] He became a
Spanish citizen in January 2007.
[4]Biography and personal life
Ronaldo de Assis Moreira was born in
Porto Alegre, a large city in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. His mother, Miguelina, is a former salesperson who studied to become a nurse. His father, João, was a shipyard worker and footballer for local club Esporte Clube Cruzeiro (not to be confused with
Cruzeiro EC),
[5] and suffered a fatal heart attack when Ronaldo was eight. After Ronaldo's older brother,
Roberto, signed with
Grêmio, the family moved to a more affluent home in Porto Alegre, which was a gift from Gremio to convince Roberto to stay at the club. Roberto's career was ultimately cut short by injury.
Ronaldo's football skills began to blossom at an early age, and he was first given the nickname Ronaldinho because he was often the youngest and the smallest player in youth club matches.
[6] He developed an interest in
futsal and beach football, which later expanded to organized football, and his first brush with the media came at the age of thirteen, when he scored all 23 goals in a 23-0 victory against a local team.
[7] Ronaldinho was identified as a rising star at the
Egypt 1997 under-17 world championship, in which he scored two goals on
penalty kicks.
[8][9]Today Roberto acts as Ronaldinho's manager, while his sister, Deisi, works as his press coordinator.
[10][11] Ronaldinho became a father for the first time on
February 25,
2005, after Brazilian dancer Janaína Mendes gave birth to their son, who was named João after Ronaldinho's father.
[12]Club career
Early career
Ronaldinho's career began with the
Grêmio youth squad under head coach
Celso Roth, who only played him due to immense pressure from team supporters. He made his senior side debut during the 1998
Copa Libertadores.
[13] In 2001,
Arsenal F.C. expressed interest in signing Ronaldinho, but the move collapsed after he could not obtain a work permit, because he was a non-
EU player who had not played enough international matches.
[14] He considered playing on loan with
Scottish Premier League side
St Mirren F.C., which never happened due to his involvement in a fake passport scandal in Brazil.
[15] Ronaldinho ultimately signed a five-year contract with
Paris Saint-Germain FC.
During the 2001-02 season, PSG manager
Luis Fernandez claimed that Ronaldinho was too focused on the Parisian nightlife rather than football, and complained that his holidays in Brazil never ended at the scheduled times.
[13] In 2003, less than two years into his PSG stint, Ronaldinho made it clear he wanted to leave after PSG failed to qualify for any European competition.
FC Barcelona
Ronaldinho in 2004.
On
July 19,
2003, FC Barcelona acquired Ronaldinho for £21 million.
[16] Originally, Barcelona president
Joan Laporta had promised to bring
David Beckham to the club, but following his transfer to
Real Madrid, Barcelona entered the running for Ronaldinho and outbid
Manchester United for his signature.
He made his team debut in a friendly against
A.C. Milan at
RFK Stadium in
Washington, D.C, scoring one goal in a 2-0 victory. After suffering from injury during the first half of the campaign, he returned and helped lead Barcelona to a second-place league finish.
Ronaldinho won his
first league title in 2004-05, and was named
FIFA World Player of the Year on December 20, 2004. On March 8, 2005, Barcelona were eliminated from the Champions League by
Chelsea F.C in the
first knockout round, with Ronaldinho scoring both goals in a 4-2 loss.
[17]With Ronaldinho's contract expiring in 2008, he was offered an extension until 2014 that would have net him £85 million over nine years,
[18] but he turned it down. In September 2005, he signed a two-year extension that contained a minimum-fee release clause that allowed him to leave should a club make an offer to Barcelona of at least £85 million for him.
[19]Ronaldinho with
Frank Rijkaard at
NASA's
Johnson Space Center.
By the end of the 2004-05 season, Ronaldinho had started to accumulate a host of personal awards. He won the inaugural
FIFPro World Player of the Year in September 2005, in addition to being included in the
FIFPro World XI. He was named as both the
European Footballer of the Year, and became the third-ever Brazilian
Ballon d'Or winner. He was again named
FIFA World Player of the Year with 956 points, more than triple the amount (306) of runner-up
Frank Lampard.
On
November 19,
2005, Ronaldinho scored twice as Barcelona defeated
Real Madrid 3-0 on the road in the first leg of the
El Clásico. After he sealed the match with his second goal, he received a standing ovation from the Madrid fans. He was chosen for the UEFA Team of 2005 for the third consecutive year in January 2006.
Barcelona eliminated
SL Benfica in the '05-06 CL quarterfinals with a 2-0 home victory, with Ronaldinho scoring one of the goals after missing an early penalty kick. After a 1-0 semifinal aggregate win over AC Milan, in which Ronaldinho assisted the series' only goal by
Ludovic Giuly, Barcelona progressed to their
first-ever CL final, which they won on March 17, 2006 with a 2-1 defeat of
Arsenal F.C. despite Ronaldinho being kept in check for the match. Two weeks earlier, Barcelona had clinched their second straight La Liga title with a 1-0 win over
Celta Vigo, giving Ronaldinho his first career double. He finished the season with a career-best twenty-six goals in all competitions, and was named the 2005-06 Champions League Player of the Year.
Ronaldinho in August 2006.
On
November 25,
2006, Ronaldinho scored his fiftieth career league goal against
Villarreal CF, then later scored a second time with an overhead
bicycle kick. He later said to reporters that the latter was a goal he had dreamed of scoring since he was a boy.
[20] He scored once and set up two others in Barcelona's 4-0
Club World Cup win over Mexico's
Club América on December 14, but Barcelona were defeated 1-0 by Brazilian club
Internacional in the final.
[21] Ronaldinho was nonetheless the recipient of the Bronze Ball Award for the competition.
The next day, Ronaldinho finished third in the running for the 2006 FIFA World Player of the Year, behind World Cup-winning captain
Fabio Cannavaro and
Zinedine Zidane.
[22] Ronaldinho was named among the
UEFA Team of the Year for the third straight time in January 2007, receiving the highest number of votes in over 290,000 nominations.
[23] He was forced to miss a charity match on March 13 due to an injury he had picked up several days earlier in Barcelona's 3-3 El Clásico draw with Real Madrid.
[24][25]He played his 200th career match for Barcelona in a league match against
Osasuna on February 3, 2008. However, his 2007-08 campaign as a whole was plagued by injuries, and a muscle tear in his right leg on April 3 prematurely ended his season.
[26] On May 19, Laporta stated that Ronaldinho needed a "new challenge," claiming that he needed a new club if he were to revive his career.
[27] Manchester City F.C. owner
Thaksin Shinawatra confirmed on June 6 that he was interested in acquiring him.
[28]Ronaldinho and Barcelona teammate
Lionel Messi each captained a team of international stars in an anti-racism exhibition match in
Venezuela on June 28, which ended in a 7-7 draw. Ronaldinho finished with a pair of goals and two assists in what would be his last match as a Barcelona player.
[29]A.C. Milan
Ronaldinho turned down a £25.5 million offer from Manchester City
[30] to join Italian giants
A.C. Milan on a three-year contract, after he was purchased from Barcelona for €21 million.
[31] With the number 10 already occupied by teammate
Clarence Seedorf, he selected 80 as his jersey number, based on his birth year.
[32]International career
Ronaldinho with Brazilian President
LulaRonaldinho is one of few Brazilian players to have played at every international age level. He was part of the first Brazilian team to win the
FIFA U-17 World Championship in 1997, in which his first goal was a penalty against
Austria in the first group match, which Brazil won 7-0. Ronaldinho finished with two goals and was awarded the Bronze Ball award as Brazil scored a total of twenty-one goals while only conceding two.
1999 was a busy year for Ronaldinho in terms of international play. He took part in the
1999 FIFA World Youth Championship, scoring his first goal in Brazil's last group match. In the round of sixteen, he scored two first-half goals in a 4-0 win over
Croatia, and finished with three goals as Brazil were eliminated by
Uruguay in the quarterfinals. On June 26, three days before the start of the
1999 Copa América, he earned his first cap for Brazil in a 3-0 win over
Latvia, and he scored one goal during Brazil's victorious Copa América campaign. One week after the conclusion of the Copa América, he was called up for the
1999 Confederations Cup, in which he scored in every match, including a hat-trick in an 8-2 semifinal rout of
Saudi Arabia. Ronaldinho missed the final, a 4-3 loss to
Mexico, due to injury.
Ronaldinho participated in his first
World Cup in 2002, as part of a formidable offensive unit with
Ronaldo and
Rivaldo, scoring two goals. One came in the quarterfinal against
England on June 21, before he was sent off for a foul on England defender
Danny Mills. He was suspended for the semifinal, but returned to Brazil's starting lineup for the 2-0 victory over
Germany in the final.
He captained Brazil to its second
Confederations Cup title in 2005, and was named Man of the Match in a 4-1 victory over archrivals
Argentina in the final on June 29.
Ronaldinho on the road with the national squad.
2006 World Cup
Ronaldinho started in all five of Brazil's
2006 World Cup finals matches as part of a much-publicized "magic quartet" of offensive players, alongside
Adriano,
Robinho, and
Kaká. However, the foursome finished with only three goals as Brazil disappointed as a whole in the tournament. Ronaldinho turned in his worst collective performance in his international career, going scoreless with only one assist, which was for
Gilberto's goal in a 4-1 group stage victory over
Japan. He was a non-factor as Brazil were eliminated by France 1-0 in the quarterfinal, in which Brazil had only one shot on goal for the entire match.
[33]The team was harshly criticized by Brazilian fans and media following their return home. On July 3, two days after Brazil's elimination, vandals immolated and destroyed a 7.5-meter (23-foot) tall
fiberglass and
resin statue of Ronaldinho in
Chapecó.
[34] The statue had been erected in 2004 to celebrate his first FIFA World Player of the Year award. That same day, Ronaldinho, joined by Adriano, returned to Barcelona and held a party at his home, which was continued into the early morning hours at a nightclub. This aggravated the hard feelings of many Brazilian fans, who believed that they were betrayed by the lack of effort from the squad.
[35] Ronaldinho and Adriano's reaction to the negative publicity contrasted with those of some of Brazil's defensive unit. Reserve goalkeeper
Rogerio Ceni commented, "Some defeats are marked by struggle, but we lost in an infelicitous way, that wasn't what we had hoped for."
[36] Meanwhile,
Zé Roberto, who earned two Man of the Match awards during the competition, tearfully said to the press, "The unity that we had outside the pitch, lacked inside it."
[37]Post-World Cup
Ronaldinho has been fairly inactive under new coach
Dunga, earning three caps in a six-month span following the World Cup. On
March 24,
2007, he started for Brazil for the first time since September 2006 and netted twice in a 4-0 win over
Chile, which marked his first goal since the 2005 Confederations Cup final and thus ended a scoreless streak that lasted nearly two years.
[38] He was not called up for the
2007 Copa América, which was won by Brazil, and on October 18, he was controversially benched by Barcelona after he was late returning to Spain following Brazil's 5-0 friendly win over
Ecuador. He and several Brazil players celebrated the win by partying through the night at a posh
Rio de Janeiro nightclub. Ronaldinho left at 11 a.m. the next morning, allegedly in the trunk of a car in order to avoid the media.
[39]Ronaldinho was named to Brazil's
2008 Summer Olympics squad on
July 7,
2008.
[40] Barcelona initially blocked the move because of his then-upcoming Champions League commitments with the club. The decision was later nullified following Ronaldinho's transfer to Milan, who in turn permitted him to make the trip to Beijing.
[41] On July 28.2008, Ronaldinho captained Brazil in an Olympic warm-up game against Singapore. Brazil won 3-0, with Ronaldinho picking up a goal and an assist.
Statistics
FC Barcelona:First match:
FC Barcelona -
Athletic Bilbao 1-0 (30-08-2003)Last match:
FC Barcelona -
Villarreal CF 2-3 (09-03-2008)
207 matches - 94 goals(
La Liga: 145/70, European Cups: 42/18 (
UEFA Cup:7/4,
UEFA Champions League:35/14),
Copa del Rey: 13/4,
Supercopa de España: 4/1,
UEFA Super Cup: 1/0,
FIFA Club World Cup: 2/1
National team:First cap:
Brazil -
Latvia 3 - 0 (26.06.1999)Last cap:
Brazil -
Singapore 3 - 0 (28.07.2008)
83 caps - 33 goals