It finally happened

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  • bobjuice
    Banned
    • May 2008
    • 4894

    It finally happened

    Ronaldo sold to Real Madrid for £80m

    Press Association

    Thursday, 11 June 2009





    Manchester United have accepted an £80million bid from Real Madrid for Portugal winger Cristiano Ronaldo.
    Ronaldo has long been a target for the Spanish giants, whose president Florentino Perez vowed earlier this week to do "everything possible" to take the 24-year-old to the Bernabeu.
    A statement on www.manutd.com this morning, under the headline 'Reds accept £80m Ronaldo bid', read: "Manchester United have received a world-record, unconditional offer of £80million for Cristiano Ronaldo from Real Madrid."
    It continues: "At Cristiano's request - who has again expressed his desire to leave - and after discussion with the player's representatives, United have agreed to give Real Madrid permission to talk to the player.
    "Matters are expected to be concluded by 30 June. The club will not comment until further notice."
    The news is bound to be greeted with some scepticism by United fans who have repeatedly been told no deal had been agreed for the sale of FIFA's world player of the year in the face of regular statements from Spain the former Sporting Lisbon star was bound for the Bernabeu.
    It was even suggested Ronaldo would be due a £20million compensation fee from Real if the deal did not go through by June 30, the date United now state themselves is when they expect matters to be concluded.
    As it now seems a matter of when, rather than if a world record transfer will be completed, Sir Alex Ferguson might wish to explain why he has gone back on his famous comment in December last year that he would not "sell that mob a virus".
    It is the first time for many years United would have allowed a player to leave they were not happy about losing.
    Yet some supporters may be pleased that at least another drawn-out transfer saga, such as the one 12 months ago, is not played out in public.
    And, at least the money could be reinvested in a squad that almost, but not quite proved good enough to win back-to-back Champions League trophies, in addition to a hat-trick of Premier League titles.
    And, in reshaping a squad that looks almost certain to lose Carlos Tevez as well, Ferguson might be able to offer Wayne Rooney a more permanent central striking role and fulfil the promise he has shown on the international stage this season.
    The name of Bayern Munich's Franck Ribery is bound to crop up as a potential replacement, although the 27-year-old seems hugely overpriced at the £40m figure being bandied about in some quarters, with Wigan's Antonio Valencia also in the frame.
    Ferguson will certainly be making plans already to ensure his new faces are on board before United head to Asia for their pre-season tour five weeks from today.
    Amid the frenzy over Ronaldo's impending departure, it is bound to be asked whether the current debt hanging over United of almost £700m has played any part in the decision to accept Real's huge bid.
    While Ferguson has always backed the Glazer family for the backing he has received, supporters will now be interested to see whether their manager is handed all the funds received from Spain, plus an annual transfer kitty said to be around £25m.
    With Edwin van der Sar, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Gary Neville all reaching the end of their careers, it promises to be a far more testing summer than Ferguson might have realised.
    And, for all the petulance and pouting for which Ronaldo is so famed, filling the void created by the loss of his immense talent may prove difficult.
  • Steve Graham
    DJ Jelly
    • Jun 2004
    • 12887

    #2
    Re: It finally happened

    finally, lol.. happy to see him go to be honest.. as good as he is, he isnt as good as he thinks he is, and rarely shows up in big matches for club or country... now with real having him and kaka, lol.. they still wont win shite, and la liga is a mediocre league at best any way.. WHEN will these big money clubs realise YOU CAN'T BUY CHAMPIONSHIPS!

    good luck and good riddance you whiny stroppy little twat

    Comment

    • bobjuice
      Banned
      • May 2008
      • 4894

      #3
      Re: It finally happened

      Originally posted by Steve Graham
      good luck and good riddance you whiny stroppy little twat

      Comment

      • Miguel
        Are you Kidding me??
        • Oct 2005
        • 3182

        #4
        Re: It finally happened

        i actually didnt want this fucko

        Comment

        • bobjuice
          Banned
          • May 2008
          • 4894

          #5
          Re: It finally happened

          Originally posted by Miguel
          i actually didnt want this fucko
          ^ No i wouldn't either, much rather have 80m sat in the bank to be honest.

          A good player, on his day a great player but like Steve said he has a habit of going missing when it gets tough.

          Comment

          • Corven
            Are you Kidding me??
            • Jun 2004
            • 4080

            #6
            Re: It finally happened

            as good a player as he is on a good day, keeping him would probably ruin the team in the long run .. at least they got good money off him
            I broke my spoon on the viagra sundae.

            Comment

            • Miguel
              Are you Kidding me??
              • Oct 2005
              • 3182

              #7
              Re: It finally happened

              theyll get that money back easy from sponsorships and commercials

              we the fans wants titles .. european titles

              Comment

              • Huggie Smiles
                Anyone have Styx livesets?
                • Jun 2004
                • 11836

                #8
                Re: It finally happened

                and then he got a range of STD's from Paris

                Cristiano Ronaldo is officially the second greasiest person Paris Hilton has ever been with!!!!
                ....Freak in the morning, Freak in the evening, aint no other Freak like me thats breathing....




                Comment

                • Miguel
                  Are you Kidding me??
                  • Oct 2005
                  • 3182

                  #9
                  Re: It finally happened

                  nice
                  i would be doing a bunch of them whores too

                  Comment

                  • Maff
                    Up the City
                    • Dec 2006
                    • 269

                    #10
                    Re: It finally happened

                    Its official the RAGS are a selling club now (still nut deep in debt hahahahahaha)

                    Comment

                    • Corven
                      Are you Kidding me??
                      • Jun 2004
                      • 4080

                      #11
                      Re: It finally happened

                      Originally posted by Huggie Smiles
                      and then he got a range of STD's from Paris

                      http://www.tmz.com/2009/06/11/paris-...st-score-ever/
                      funny if he really does get a range of STDs .... in a few months Sir Alex would be glad to get rid of a sick pony for 80 million
                      I broke my spoon on the viagra sundae.

                      Comment

                      • Steve Graham
                        DJ Jelly
                        • Jun 2004
                        • 12887

                        #12
                        Re: It finally happened

                        Originally posted by Maff
                        Its official the RAGS are a selling club now (still nut deep in debt hahahahahaha)

                        that's not news mate, are there any clubs not in debt? in any sport?
                        thing is, we'll still when prem title after prem title with or without him.. i'd be willing to bet man u wins at least 2 more premiership titles before real madrid sniffs 1 la liga... what did they pay for him? came close to doubling the money i bet, in all honesty i'd say we won in spite of him

                        and his footballer of the year title is about as much of a joke as giggs being prem player of the year

                        Comment

                        • bobjuice
                          Banned
                          • May 2008
                          • 4894

                          #13
                          Re: It finally happened

                          James Lawton: A sad retreat from Moscow for Ronaldo and United

                          The seeds of the Portuguese prodigy's departure were sown at the scene of his greatest triumph, and since flouncing out of the Champions League final last year, he seemed to care only for himself

                          Friday, 12 June 2009


                          Getty
                          Ronaldo with Sir Alex Ferguson after winning the European Cup in Moscow in 2008



                          Good riddance to so much of what Cristiano Ronaldo became but then, of course, more regrets than we can comfortably list here that the best of him, at least as far as Manchester United were concerned, had gone some time before they publicly accepted yesterday the £80m offer of Real Madrid.
                          This, we have to believe, buttressed, along with a working profit of around £68m, Sir Alex Ferguson's disappointment that somewhere along the line he could no longer talk the language, or walk the swaggering walk, of the most brilliantly gifted protégé he is ever likely to know.
                          Yes, it is true Ronaldo had a range of gifts which undoubtedly gave him that distinction, and if it is also right that some of us were never likely to be argued out of the belief that in instinctive genius he would always live in the shadow of the late George Best, there is no doubt that at this moment the 24-year-old Portuguese is in some ways quite irreplaceable.
                          Yet for so much of last season it was plain that replaced he had to be. Not because he had lost, despite the consistent brilliance of Lionel Messi, all claims to being the best player on earth. Not because he had shed the capacity to strike opponents dead in one moment of blazing power or virtuosity. No, it was that something had unbalanced his playing nature quite seriously.
                          Mere narcissism wasn't the problem. Best wasn't exactly invaded by personal modesty, once declaring, "If I had been born ugly you would never have heard of Pele," and nor was he always a paragon of the team concept. But Best never made his team-mates or his fans believe that he was operating under sufferance, that he was too sexy for his shirt. That, in the last year or so, was the overwhelming impression created by Ronaldo.
                          At the first great pinnacle of his career, which came last year at the age of 23 when he collected his Champions League medal, he could hardly have separated himself more wilfully from the embrace of a triumphant team. No, he said, he could not give any promises for the future.
                          He didn't make such things, not even to his mother. He flounced out of the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow and anyone who saw that performance knew that deep down the story of Ronaldo and United, the uplifting one of beautifully achieved mutual goals, was just about over.
                          Though 18 Premier League goals last season could not be described as abdication something in his body language was precisely that. If he cared, he seemed to announce with scarcely a breath of ambivalence, it was for himself rather than the cause.
                          Who knows, Ronaldo may find a new lease of ambition and commitment at the Bernabeu in the re-birth of the galacticos culture and certainly the challenge, alongside Kaka, of wresting La Liga away from Barcelona's silky grasp, looks like a sure-fire provocation for some of the levels of achievement he touched the season before last.
                          Yet in other respects the portents are not so good. Real Madrid, as Liverpool underlined with some emphasis, have been for some time pretty much a rabble when compared to the standards set by Barça and, for that matter, United. Do either Kaka or Ronaldo have, beyond their extra-ordinary individual gifts, the mentalities to impose the kind of match-in, match-out standards of professional discipline it will take to lift Real back among the serious contenders?
                          It is a question which in Ronaldo's case particularly does not permit the most confident of answers. However, even in his dog days at Old Trafford plainly the last of his appetites to decline was his lust for acclamation and there will certainly be no shortage of that if he makes an early splash in Madrid. United fans were, understandably enough, mostly philosophical yesterday, at least those who were not gripped by the fear that the Ronaldo profits would disappear into the sinkhole of corporate debt rather than the vital re-seeding of a team which displayed some rather shocking deficiencies in the Stadio Olimpico in Rome last month once Barça found the nerve to score.
                          Elsewhere the collective shrug merely reflected the fact that the messages Ronaldo had been sending out for some time had been received and understood. He wanted to move on. He wanted another theatre, another place to parade his beauty and his skill. So it goes, especially when the superhero so often seems to forget that football isn't a beauty parade but a unified effort built most successfully on the foundations of consistency and respect.
                          For every game Ronaldo illuminated with his skill and power, there was another from which he exiled himself on the merest whim. Yes, he received a lot of physical attention, but any more than Best or Pele or Maradona, who existed on pain-killers for so much of his career? Those who see a difference between the meaning of such players and Ronaldo are accused of some in-built prejudice, but the reality is that in some vital ways he does not represent the full range of those assets normally consigned to a great player.
                          No doubt he has many of them, certainly more than enough in the taste of many to compensate for his reluctance to correct a mistake that piled pressure on his team-mates, his terrible diving tendency and his apparent belief that only some dark conspiracy separated him from uninterrupted glory. No doubt these negative aspects of a most formidable talent will be softened in the memory of Old Trafford by the years. Not even his most strenuous critics can deny that the Ronaldo years were marked more than anything by a growing sense that any achievement was possible.
                          But that was the best of his years, when his talent flew with the joy of a suddenly released bird. In Madrid the cage door may swing open again, but if it does there need be no doubts about the good sense of yesterday's business. At Old Trafford the cage door had been effectively closed for some time, and by nobody's hand but Cristiano Ronaldo's.

                          Comment

                          • floridaorange
                            I'm merely a humble butler
                            • Dec 2005
                            • 29116

                            #14
                            Re: It finally happened

                            That's a lot of damn money just for kicking a ball into a huge goal with one guy standing in it

                            It was fun while it lasted...

                            Comment

                            • Steve Graham
                              DJ Jelly
                              • Jun 2004
                              • 12887

                              #15
                              Re: It finally happened

                              and its rumoured he may make up over half a million a week at the peak of his contract?! lmoa.. Real Madrid come the fuck on now

                              Comment

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