Cristiano
Ronaldo cast a shadow over Real Madrid’s third consecutive Champions League
triumph by suggesting he could have played his last game for the Spanish giants
in Saturday’s 3-1 win over Liverpool in Kiev.
Ronaldo,
33, has now won five European Cups in all, but failed to score in a fourth
final as Gareth Bale was the hero for Real after coming off the bench to score
twice. “I am going to enjoy this moment and in the next few days I will give an
answer to the fans, who have always been at my side,” Ronaldo told BeIN Sports
Spain. “It was very nice to be at Real Madrid. In the next few days I will
speak.” Ronaldo later admitted his immediate post-match comments had been
ill-timed. “It wasn’t the perfect time. I don’t want to take away any credit
from what Madrid have done. To win three consecutive Champions Leagues is a
unique moment, he added. “Personal situations are not important at this
moment.” Ronaldo’s comments appeared to target Real president Florentino Perez
for a lack of support. However, Perez hinted he was tired of Ronaldo’s
intimations he could leave.
It
isn’t the first time Ronaldo, who joined Real from Manchester United for a
then-world record fee in 2009, has appeared close to the exit door at the
Santiago Bernabeu. In 2012 he claimed to be “sad” in Madrid, and, even after
securing a first European Cup and La Liga double for Madrid in 59 years last
season, Ronaldo was also reportedly looking to leave. Then, it was for what he
perceived as a lack of support from the club over an ongoing tax investigation
into the management of his image rights from the Spanish authorities. Ronaldo
himself said this week of speculation over who might arrive at Real: “They
always speak about 50 players and in the end no one comes.” “Here the most
important thing is the club, and the most important thing is that we are
celebrating this Champions League,” Perez told Antena3. “I am not going to go
into the personal situations of any player because, as he himself says, nothing
ever happens.” Ronaldo still has three years to run on a lucrative five-year
contract signed in 2016. “Cristiano likes to be wanted,” said Real Madrid
captain Sergio Ramos. “He will not find a better place than here. He is our
true star, whether he scores goals or not. I don’t know why he has said that,
but we respect him.” Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane, who become the first ever
manager to win three consecutive European Cups, said that Ronaldo must stay.
“I’m not thinking about that. We are thinking about what we are doing now,
about the game, about what we have achieved,” said the Frenchman. “Cristiano
has to stay.”
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