LONDON: Cristiano Ronaldo’s discontent with Real Madrid has reached a point where “he doesn’t even want to talk to the president”, Florentino Perez. According to sources close to the most successful footballer in the Spanish club’s history, Ronaldo has been angered by Madrid’s failure to deliver an improved contract.
Despite cementing his status as the game’s best player by leading Madrid to a Liga, Champions League and Club World Cup treble this year while collecting back-to-back World Player of the Year awards, Ronaldo has seen his salary eclipsed by Lionel Messi and Neymar. His argument is that on-field achievements should be correctly reflected in his contractual terms — particularly as his commercial value to Madrid is superior to that of the two South Americans.
Ronaldo has also complained to friends of a lack of respect on the part of Madrid’s president in publicly flirting with Neymar on the night the Portugal international collected the fifth Ballon d’Or of his career.
“Being in Madrid would make it easier to win the Ballon d’Or,” said Perez of Neymar earlier this month.”Real Madrid is a club which gives all you need as a big player, everyone knows that I already wanted to sign him at one point.”
Madrid lost a high-stakes bidding war to Barcelona when Perez failed to persuade Neymar to leave Santos for the Spanish capital in 2013. Although the Brazil international exploited a €222 million ($263 million) release clause to join Paris Saint-Germain last summer, Neymar’s father has encouraged Madrid to renew their pursuit of the 25-year-old — a move Ronaldo’s camp is aware of.
Currently in his ninth season at Madrid, Ronaldo has reset a host of national, European and global records while scoring 422 goals for the club. The 32-year-old has stated his intention to play into 40s and aims to be recognized as the greatest footballer of all time.
After deciding last weekend’s Club World Cup Final with the only goal in a 1-0 defeat of Gremio, Ronaldo deliberately placed public pressure on Perez to improve his financial terms by stating a desire to finish his career at the Santiago Bernabeu — if conditions were correct. “I would really like to, but things don’t depend on me,” he said. “What depends on me is what I do on the pitch. I am not the one who runs the club, that is for those in charge. My job is on the pitch and I think I am doing it well, the rest I can’t control.”
Formally agreed in November 2016, Ronaldo’s current contract runs until the summer of 2021 and is understood to include a guaranteed gross salary of €48 million a year. That figure had been surpassed twice this year. First, by PSG’s summer deal with Neymar, then by the belated formalization of Messi’s hugely improved Barca contract. The Argentina international became the first footballer to be rewarded contract with a contract said to be worth an annual €50 million after-tax.
Ronaldo’s situation is further complicated by an ongoing dispute with the Spanish government over an alleged €14.7 million of unpaid tax. The player denies evading tax or hiding details of his income and argues that he has been targeted because of his celebrity. “If I wasn’t called Cristiano Ronaldo, I wouldn’t be sat here,” he said in a court appearance earlier this year.
Discussions between club and player over improved terms took place at the end of last season. Asked about a renewal ahead of Saturday’s 3-0 loss to Barcelona, Madrid coach Zinedine Zidance said: “What I think is that Cristiano, what he has done and what he is doing, deserves all of the club’s respect, but only after the winter break will we talk about it.”
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