Ronaldo Signs $31M Deal for Manchester United
By Oliver Kay
The Times Online
The signing of Cristiano Ronaldo on a new five-year, £31 million contract yesterday represented the best possible news for a buoyant Manchester United as they continue their quest for success on three fronts. But the ink had barely begun to dry when Sir Alex Ferguson angrily condemned Real Madrid’s attempts to unsettle a player he has challenged to follow in the footsteps of Pelé and Diego Maradona.
Ronaldo’s decision to sign a deal worth about £120,000 a week, making him the best-paid player in United’s history, came as a serious blow to Real, who had been encouraged to believe that the 22-year-old Portugal winger would join them in the summer. Those hopes are now over — for another year at least — but Ferguson’s delight did not stop him castigating the Spanish club for their part in the saga.
“I had no doubts Cristiano would sign, but I think everyone else outside Old Trafford had,” Ferguson, whose team take on Watford in the semi-finals of the FA Cup at Villa Park this evening, said. “In this case, I think there were some grounds for the speculation in that they [Real] keep talking in Spain and unsettling clubs like ourselves. They don’t have any regard for anyone but themselves when they decide to put their neck out for the best players in the world. They’ve shown that over the years.
“When it continually goes on and on, you start worrying about the substance and the source of it, even though you know deep inside you it’s a game that they play. It seems to happen time and time again.
“There’s no point reporting them to Uefa. If you fined them, they would wipe their backsides with it. But I believe Cristiano is at the right club. He’s playing in front of 76,000 fans every week. There was no reason for him to think about leaving other than that people perceive Real Madrid as galácticos, or whatever they call themselves.”
Sources at Old Trafford have indicated that Ronaldo had to persuade his agent, Jorge Mendes, to bring forward negotiations rather than leave the door open to a summer move to Spain.
Mendes initially told David Gill, the United chief executive, last month that his client, who signed a £70,000-a-week deal in November 2005, would require a figure in excess of £130,000 to stay, but a compromise in the region of £120,000 was struck late on Thursday. That figure eclipses the £100,000-a-week basic wage paid to Rio Ferdinand and Wayne Rooney — if not the £130,000 that Chelsea pay Michael Ballack and Andriy Shevchenko every week — although the breakdown of Ronaldo’s deal is not yet clear.

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