Disrespectful Man United have betrayed me & made me a black sheep, says Ronaldo in explosive Piers Morgan interview
Posted Monday, November 14, 2022 by Thesun.co.uk
CRISTIANO Ronaldo has had enough.
He's had enough of the sniping, the sneering, and the endless blame-game bulls*** that's been flung at him over the past few months.
Ronaldo sat down for a sensational 90-minute TV interview with Piers
It's come from the media, his bosses, work colleagues and even former team-mates.
Above all, he's had enough of the lack of basic respect that he feels he's due after winning 32 trophies, including five Ballon d'Ors, five Champions Leagues, seven league titles in four different countries, and a Euros with Portugal.
Ronaldo, 37, is the highest goal scorer in football history and for me, and many more qualified to pass judgment such as Zinedine Zidane and Carlo Ancelotti, the greatest to ever play the game.
He's also the most-followed human being on Instagram, the modern-day metric of star power, and is about to pass half a billion followers.
But right now he feels angry, and disrespected, and he's not going to stay silent any longer.
As he prepares to fly to Qatar for his fifth — and almost certainly last — World Cup, he wants to have HIS say.
We sat down for a 90-minute TV interview for my show Piers Morgan Uncensored that is by far the most explosive he has ever given.
Ronaldo finally sets the record straight about what he calls the "most difficult period of my life", both professionally and personally.
He says he feels "betrayed" by the way he has been treated by Manchester United, annoyed that he's been made a "black sheep" who is blamed for everything that has gone wrong at the club, and believes he is now being actively forced out.
At work, he has had three bosses in just over a year.
For the first, his former team-mate Ole Gunnar Solskjaer who was sacked just weeks after Ronaldo returned, he has nothing but respect.
For the other two, Ralf Rangnick and current manager Erik ten Hag, he has little good to say.
Of Rangnick, who had not managed a football team for over a decade, he says: "If you're not even a coach, how are you going to be the boss of Manchester United? I'd never even heard of him."
Of Ten Hag, who suspended Ronaldo last month for refusing to come on as a last-minute substitute against Tottenham, he says: "I don't have respect for him because he doesn't show respect for me.
"If you don't have respect for me, I'm never gonna have respect for you."
As for some of his most vociferous critics, like another former team-mate Wayne Rooney who has publicly attacked Ronaldo for months and urged United to get rid of him, he is witheringly scornful of their headline-grabbing motives.
He says: "I don't know why he criticises me so badly . . . probably because he finished his career and I'm still playing at high level."
Then he chuckles and adds: "I'm not going to say that I'm looking better than him. Which is true . . . "
At home, back in April, he and his partner Georgina suffered the unbearable loss of their baby son during childbirth, a heart-breaking tragedy in which the boy's twin sister survived.
Somehow, he found the strength to continue playing, fuelled in part by the astonishing support he received from fans of rival clubs such as Liverpool, where the crowd sang You'll Never Walk Alone on the seventh minute (Ronaldo wears No 7 on his shirt) of their next home game.
He admits: "I never expected to see that."
He and Georgina also received a personal note of condolence from the Royal Family, which amazed and touched him in equal measure.
Shockingly, he was less well supported by his club who he accuses of a lack of "empathy", especially when his three-month-old daughter was hospitalised in July, and he could not return on time for pre-season training because he wanted to stay with her.
Ronaldo says senior executives at Old Trafford even doubted him when he explained why he couldn't return, which made him feel "hurt" and "bad".
This wasn't how the fairy tale was supposed to end.
It was just over 14 months ago that Ronaldo sensationally re-signed for Manchester United in a comeback story that stunned and enthralled the world of football.
He was heading to United's great rivals Manchester City when a personal appeal from his great mentor and father figure, Sir Alex Ferguson, drove him back to where he started.
"I followed my heart," he says simply, tapping his chest. "He (Sir Alex) said to me, 'It's impossible for you to come to Manchester City', and I said, 'OK, Boss'."
In his first game back at Old Trafford, the self-styled "Theatre of Dreams", he scored twice in a thumping 4-1 victory over Newcastle, cheered on in the stands by Sir Alex and Ronaldo's ecstatic weeping mother.
The delirious United fans chanted "Viva Ronaldo" for hours after the game.
As his team-mate Marcus Rashford tweeted that night: "Like he never left."
But very soon, cold, hard reality hit. This was a very different Manchester United to the club he first departed in 2009.
Or rather, to his dismay, it was just the same, and hadn't moved on at all, and was now run by what he perceives to be inferior people to those who ran things before.
He was shocked by the lack of improvements to training facilities, from the pool and the gym to the kitchen (nutrition and diet), and in technology.
"The progress was zero," he sighs. "Since Sir Alex left, I saw no evolution in the club. Nothing had changed."
And he was dismayed by the dismissive attitude of many of the younger players, who seemed to have no interest in learning the lessons he had gleaned in his magnificent career.
Most pertinently, he was disillusioned to find that, after years of failure and stagnation, United could no longer sign the world's very best players, making their chance of winning top trophies much harder.
"I think the fans should know the truth," he says. "I want the best for the club. This is why I come to Manchester United.
"But you have some things inside that don't help (us) reach the top level as City, Liverpool and even now Arsenal . . . a club with this dimension should be top of the tree in my opinion and they are not unfortunately."
At the centre of his discontent is that Ronaldo hates losing and wants to operate in a winning environment — of the kind he doesn't believe exists at United now and may need drastic steps to fix, including him leaving.
He says: "As Picasso said, you have to destroy it to rebuild it (the artist's exact quote was: 'Every act of creation is first an act of destruction.') and if they start with me, for me, it's not a problem.
"I love Manchester United, I love the fans, they're always on my side. But if they want to do it different… they have to change many, many things."
As for what Sir Alex thinks of the current situation, Ronaldo says: "He knows better than anybody that the club is not on the path they deserve to be.
"He knows. Everyone knows. The people who don't see that… it's because they don't want to see; they are blind."
I first interviewed Cristiano three years ago in Turin, Italy, when he was still playing for Juventus, and we ended up having a four-hour dinner together.
Since then, we've become very unlikely but very good friends. We text and speak a lot, and he has always been incredibly honest with me.
He's a very smart, likeable guy who has given a lot of careful thought to doing this interview.
I've felt the frustration and anger building inside him for many months.
Ronaldo takes his football very seriously — and winning even more seriously.
You don't get to have all the trophies and records he has without possessing a ferociously strong and resilient mentality, a relentless work ethic, a stupefyingly intense competitive spirit, and an unshakeable self-confidence that you're No 1.
For someone like Ronaldo to suddenly find himself at a club that isn't competing for top silverware, and where he has been dropped, benched, snubbed, scolded and even last month, for the first time in his career, suspended, has hit him hard.
Not least because last season he was the club's leading scorer with 24 goals.
He doesn't expect any special treatment, but he does expect to be treated with the respect he feels he has earned.
When our interview finished, Georgina arrived with an excited gaggle of their young children, who instantly all ran to their father and clung on to his legs.
To see Ronaldo with his kids is a joy; he showers them with the same love and affection that his mother has always showered on him.
He said: "My family is everything to me. Even more so after what we have been through this year."
Earlier, on camera, he made a breathtakingly poignant revelation about his dead son that had me choking up.
I can't imagine living my life in the constant frenzied goldfish bowl with which Ronaldo has to lead his, where everything he does or says is so intensely scrutinised, often harshly, around the planet.
To have to do it after suffering the shocking tragedy of losing a child must be astoundingly hard.
But he doesn't want anyone to feel sorry for him.
He knows that he is a very lucky man with a beautiful family, vast wealth, and a God-given talent that's made him one of the most celebrated and famous sports stars in history.
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