WSC Logo



SEARCH  

Advanced search

dig
ROB

Weekly Howl

A mixture of comment, fact and captivating trivia via email

Sign up

Follow WSC

 twitter

NEWSFEEDS

sstore

 

HOME arrow WSC DAILY arrow June 2009 arrow Cristiano Ronaldo on his way
Cristiano Ronaldo on his way

Image Friday 12 June ~

As Cristiano Ronaldo ties up an £80 million move to Real Madrid, feelings are mixed among Manchester United fans. The majority are grateful for his six years of service and 118 goals. Some long for him to stay, while others acknowledge that he should go: “If you don't want to play for the biggest club in the world, you're just in it for the money,” says Manc foghorn Terry Christian in the Sun. Curious, because Real are the biggest club in the world, with a larger stadium, more fans and €41m more revenue than United in 2007-08. Yes he'll earn more, but he's not just in it for the money – or so he claims.

Some have suggested that the move represents a switch in power away from the Premier League over to Spain where it's sunnier and imported players get taxed only 23 per cent of their income, compared to 50 per cent here. However, the recent activity at Madrid is due predominantly to the returning president Florentino Perez and his resurrection of the galacticos transfer policy. Kaka and Ronaldo join a list that includes Luis Figo, Ronaldo (the fat one), Zinedine Zidane and David Beckham. But major international players are still expected to arrive at Premier League clubs this summer.

Having sanctioned Ronaldo's move, Sir Alex Ferguson has a fortune to spend – the full £80m according to most papers. The Glazers claim to want none, which is hard to believe considering the fee would cover a year's debt interest payments (£69m) or the last financial year's losses (£44m).

Replacements linked to United include Antonio Valencia from Wigan, Lyon's Karim Benzema and Franck Ribery of Bayern Munich, perhaps now the most coveted player in the world. Naturally, Real want Ribery too and haven't yet finished spending. Should these moves materialise Ferguson's side will arguably improve. In the key Champions League games last season Ronaldo played in the middle of a front three, with Wayne Rooney and Park Ji-sung beside, entrusted with the additional task of tracking up and down. Having Valencia, Benzema, Park or a retained Carlos Tevez out wide would allow Rooney to move to the centre instead. Between them, such replacements ought to comfortably replace the 26 goals that Ronaldo contributed last season.

As with Beckham and Ruud van Nistelrooy, Ronaldo can't be sure that he will replicate the success he has enjoyed at Old Trafford however much Real end up spending – Barcelona still seem a long way ahead of their major rivals. But what is certain is that Man Utd fans will soon get over him. Tom Whitworth

Share this article:
Delicious
Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Mister.Wong
Comments (5)
Comment by The Exploding Vole 12-06-2009 15:01    [Offensive? Unsuitable?
Report this comment
]

It's never about the money, is it? Nope, never.

Comment by sepps bladder 12-06-2009 19:22    [Offensive? Unsuitable?
Report this comment
]

Money doesn't talk, it swears.(Dylan)

Comment by MarcRamone 12-06-2009 21:09    [Offensive? Unsuitable?
Report this comment
]

Going shopping in the times of crisis, let´s spend £80 million! To me all these high amounts are just pervert and I still can not get accustomed to it.

And even if a player like Ronaldo get taxed, if 23 per cent or 50 per cent, it does not decrease his standard of living at all.

Comment by fbrazolin 13-06-2009 15:30    [Offensive? Unsuitable?
Report this comment
]

Fantastic. There's no crisis in the football world.

Comment by radmonkey 14-06-2009 08:16    [Offensive? Unsuitable?
Report this comment
]

No offense, but Real Madrid is at least as big as Manchested United. Especially when you add up all those trophies.

Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 

Today's most read WSC articles

Teenage anguish - USA MLS youth development   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 145 Mar 99

Major success? MLS's first season   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 118 Dec 96

The domination game Praising Chelsea   

WSC   

WSC 217 Mar 05

Oldham Athletic Dowie, Wembley, Division Two   

Steve Ragg   

WSC 194 Apr 03

States of happiness 1999 women's World Cup   

Ethan Zindler   

WSC 151 Sep 99

Firm Favourites: Old Firm Sectarianism in Scotland   

Dianne Millen   

WSC 206 Apr 04

Unpopularity contest West Ham and Terence Brown   

Darron Kirkby   

WSC 223 Sep 05

Amir Karic and Ulrich Le Pen Not worth the money?   

Jonathan Barnes   

WSC 221 Jul 05

No love, no joy Tim Lovejoy’s rubbish autobiography   

Taylor Parkes   

WSC 250 Dec 07

Unreasonable force Heavy policing in Portugal   

Adam Brown   

WSC 123 May 97