Cristiano Ronaldo didn't expect to match Lionel Messi's Ballon d'Or haul

Published on: 08 December 2017

Cristiano Ronaldo has embraced his rivalry with Lionel Messi, after joining the Argentine as a five-time winner of the Ballon d'Or. Cristiano Ronaldo reflects on his fifth Ballon d'Or triumph, explaining his motivation remains for club and country. Shaka Hislop points to Cristiano Ronaldo's late-season heroics and UCL triumph as reasons why he beat Lionel Messi in Ballon d'Or voting. Jonathan Johnson breaks down the Ballon d'Or voting following Cristiano Ronaldo's fifth win and discusses the Real Madrid star's rivalry with Lionel Messi. Steve Nicol says Cristiano Ronaldo is well deserving of his fifth Ballon d'Or, which now ties him for most all-time with Lionel Messi.

Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo said he never thought he would equal Lionel Messi's haul of five Ballons d'Or after pulling level with the Barcelona forward by winning the 2017 award.

Ronaldo won his first Ballon d'Or while he was at Manchester United in 2008, but then saw Messi win football's most prestigious individual award in each of the next four years before he won it again.

Messi last triumphed in 2015 with Ronaldo picking it up in each of the last two years to join the Argentina international as the joint-most decorated players in the history of the award.

"I didn't think I'd be able to catch Messi, because after I won my first, he won four, and I thought it would be difficult to equal him," Ronaldo told L'Equipe. "But football gives you the opportunity to keep working and winning, and I have won, and I'm experiencing a great period."

Ronaldo endured the frustration of watching Messi take the honour, notably when France Football fused the award with the FIFA World Player of the Year in 2010, which led to some uncomfortable moments for the Portugal international.

"I won a Ballon d'Or before Messi and then he overtook me winning four in a row," he said. "I can't hide the fact I was sad and angry. I went to the awards ceremony and never won. I was even demotivated. I didn't want to go there any more. I wasn't interested in being there for the photo.

"And then, little by little, thanks to the support of those around me, I said to myself that everything has a start and an end. And that in football, it's the end that counts, not the start. I was patient, and I've won other Ballons d'Or. Today is the fifth, and that pushes me more to keep fighting, without thinking of my age."

Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi have each won five Ballons d'Or.

Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane paid tribute to the four-time Champions League winner saying despite his success he retains the ambition to keep winning.

"When he's here and he's training, when he can score, for example, 10 times in training, he'll score 10 times," Zidane said. "That's what impresses me. To always want to score, always want to win games, even in training. It's his ambition that impresses me."

Former manager Sir Alex Ferguson added that he is proud of the part he played in Ronaldo's development into one of the game's best-ever players.

"The greatest satisfaction I have had with Cristiano was that he came from Madeira, through Sporting Lisbon, and then to my club, and developed into the player he is. You couldn't get greater satisfaction than that," Ferguson told L'Equipe.

"Our training would generally consist of the same things in terms of intensity, but sometimes a player can go on and be different. They have a great desire to practice, and Ronaldo was the best at practising."

Ian is ESPN's French football correspondent. Twitter: @ian_holyman

Comments

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.

Source: espn.co.uk

Comments