Ronaldo with Portugal at the 2018 FIFA World Cup | ||||||||
| Personal information | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro[1] | |||||||
| Date of birth | 5 February 1985[1] | |||||||
| Place of birth | Funchal, Madeira, Portugal[1] | |||||||
| Height | 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)[note 1] | |||||||
| Position(s) | Forward | |||||||
| Club information | ||||||||
Current team | Juventus | |||||||
| Number | 7 | |||||||
| Youth career | ||||||||
| 1992–1995 | Andorinha | |||||||
| 1995–1997 | Nacional | |||||||
| 1997–2002 | Sporting CP | |||||||
| Senior career* | ||||||||
| Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) | |||||
| 2002–2003 | Sporting CP B | 2 | (0) | |||||
| 2002–2003 | Sporting CP | 25 | (3) | |||||
| 2003–2009 | Manchester United | 196 | (84) | |||||
| 2009–2018 | Real Madrid | 292 | (311) | |||||
| 2018– | Juventus | 97 | (81) | |||||
| National team‡ | ||||||||
| 2001 | Portugal U15 | 9 | (7) | |||||
| 2001–2002 | Portugal U17 | 7 | (5) | |||||
| 2003 | Portugal U20 | 5 | (1) | |||||
| 2002–2003 | Portugal U21 | 10 | (3) | |||||
| 2004 | Portugal U23 | 3 | (2) | |||||
| 2003– | Portugal | 179 | (109) | |||||
show Honours | ||||||||
| ||||||||
| * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 18:05, 15 May 2021 (UTC) ‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 22:00, 27 June 2021 (UTC) | ||||||||
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Portuguese professional footballer Eponyms Films | ||
Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro GOIH ComM (Portuguese pronunciation: [kɾiʃˈtjɐnu ʁɔˈnaɫdu]; born 5 February 1985) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a forward for Serie A club Juventus and captains the Portugal national team. Often considered the best player in the world and widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, Ronaldo has won five Ballon d'Or awards[note 3] and four European Golden Shoes, both of which are records for a European player. He has won 32 major trophies in his career, including seven league titles, five UEFA Champions Leagues, one UEFA European Championship, and one UEFA Nations League title. Ronaldo holds the records for the most international goals (109, tied with Ali Daei), the most goals in the Champions League (134) and the most goals in the European Championship (14). He is one of the few recorded players to have made over 1,100 professional career appearances and has scored over 780 official senior career goals for club and country.
Born and raised in Madeira, Ronaldo began his senior club career playing for Sporting CP, before signing with Manchester United in 2003, aged 18. After winning the FA Cup in his first season, he helped United win three successive Premier League titles, the Champions League, and the FIFA Club World Cup; at age 23, he won his first Ballon d'Or. In 2009, Ronaldo was the subject of the then-most expensive association football transfer when he signed for Real Madrid in a transfer worth €94 million (£80 million). There, he won 15 trophies, including two La Liga titles, two Copas del Rey, and four Champions League titles, and became the club's all-time top goalscorer. After joining Madrid, Ronaldo finished runner-up for the Ballon d'Or three times, behind Lionel Messi – his perceived career rival – before winning back-to-back Ballons d'Or from 2013–2014 and again from 2016–2017. After winning a third consecutive Champions League title in 2018, Ronaldo became the first player to win the trophy five times. In 2018, he signed for Juventus in a transfer worth an initial €100 million (£88 million), the highest fee ever paid by an Italian club and the highest ever paid for a player over 30 years old. He won two Serie A titles, two Supercoppa Italiana and a Coppa Italia in his first three seasons with the club.
Ronaldo made his senior international debut for Portugal in 2003 at age 18, and has since earned over 170 caps, including appearing and scoring in eleven major tournaments, becoming Portugal's most capped player and his country's all-time top goalscorer. He scored his first international goal at Euro 2004 where he helped Portugal reach the final and assumed full captaincy of the national team in July 2008. In 2015 Ronaldo was named the best Portuguese player of all time by the Portuguese Football Federation. The following year he led Portugal to their first triumph in a major tournament by winning Euro 2016, and received the Silver Boot as the second-highest goalscorer of the tournament.
One of the most marketable and famous athletes in the world, Ronaldo was ranked the world's highest-paid athlete by Forbes in 2016 and 2017 and the world's most famous athlete by ESPN from 2016 to 2019. Time included him on their list of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2014. He is the first footballer, as well as only the third sportsman, to earn $1 billion in their career.
Early life
Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro was born in São Pedro, Funchal, on the Portuguese island of Madeira, and grew up in Santo António, Funchal.[9][10] He is the fourth and youngest child of Maria Dolores dos Santos Viveiros da Aveiro, a cook, and José Dinis Aveiro, a municipal gardener and part-time kit man.[11] His great-grandmother on his father's side, Isabel da Piedade, was from the island of São Vicente, Cape Verde.[12] He has one older brother, Hugo, and two older sisters, Elma and Liliana Cátia "Katia".[13] His mother revealed that she wanted to abort him due to poverty, his father's alcoholism and having too many children already, but her doctor refused to perform the procedure.[14] Ronaldo grew up in a Catholic and impoverished home, sharing a room with all his siblings.[15]
As a child, Ronaldo played for Andorinha from 1992 to 1995,[16] where his father was the kit man,[11] and later spent two years with Nacional. In 1997, aged 12, he went on a three-day trial with Sporting CP, who signed him for a fee of £1,500.[17] He subsequently moved from Madeira to Alcochete, near Lisbon, to join Sporting youth football academy.[17] By age 14, Ronaldo believed he had the ability to play semi-professionally, and agreed with his mother to cease his education in order to focus entirely on football.[18] While popular with other students at school, he had been expelled after throwing a chair at his teacher, who he said had "disrespected" him.[18] However, one year later, he was diagnosed with a racing heart, a condition that could have forced him to give up playing football.[19] Ronaldo underwent heart surgery where a laser was used to cauterise multiple cardiac pathways into one, altering his resting heart rate.[20] He was discharged from the hospital hours after the procedure and resumed training a few days later

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