09 June, 2010

Veron's Regret; Ronny's Pressure

VERON LAMENTS OLD TRAFFORD EXIT
manutd.com

Argentina veteran Juan Sebastian Veron has admitted he has regrets over leaving Manchester United. The 35-year-old midfielder spent two years with Sir Alex Ferguson's side from 2001-03 before transferring to fellow Premier League club Chelsea. Veron has since made the move back to Argentina to play for his boyhood club Estudiantes, but believes he could have been happier staying at Old Trafford.
"The decision to move wasn't easy. If it was today I think I would approach it very differently,"
 Veron told The Guardian. "I mean, obviously to a certain extent one makes decisions because one is fairly sure, but I think with hindsight perhaps I wouldn't have moved because I was really comfortable at Manchester, and even the lads came to see me two or three times to talk me into staying. I guess Mr Ferguson also has a pretty big say in who stays and who goes, but I think if the whole thing happened today I might handle it differently."


Veron with United

RONNY NEEDS THE GOALS from foxsoccer.com

The World Cup provides a global showcase for football's greatest forwards, and if Cristiano Ronaldo wants to ever reach the same status as the likes of Pele and Diego Maradona he must do something he hasn't done for 16 months - score a goal for Portugal.

The tournament in South Africa needs stars like Ronaldo and Argentina's Lionel Messi to produce their skills on the sport's biggest stage, to thrill the billions of spectators watching games on television worldwide.
That means FIFA's 2008 world player of the year will have to break a goal drought stretching back to a friendly game in February 2009 when he scored from the penalty spot against Finland.
In competitive matches, he has not found the net for Portugal since the 2008 European Championship.
The time to deliver on that promise has come as Portugal readies for its June 15 opener against Ivory Coast.
"It's not a problem...I'm saving myself for the World Cup."

Ronaldo has the ability to set alight a game, which is why Real Madrid paid Manchester United 80 million pounds ($118 million) for him a year ago.
The Portuguese forward's electrifying bursts of pace, his spellbinding footwork and blistering right-foot shots - which Manchester United fans nicknamed "Ronny rockets" - have brought crowds to their feet at Old Trafford and the Santiago Bernabeu stadium.
Injuries, though, have unsettled Ronaldo's international career. He played in just seven of Portugal's 12 World Cup qualifying matches and in some games was still recovering from injury.
In 73 appearances since his 2003 debut, Ronaldo has scored 22 goals.
Still, Portuguese fans grumble that his inability to reproduce his club form at international level is partly to blame for Portugal's recent below-par performances, including a 0-0 draw against tiny Cape Verde last month.
In his last two seasons, at United and Madrid, he has scored more than 70 goals.
With winger Nani, Ronaldo's former teammate at Manchester United, ruled out of the World Cup due to a bruised collarbone, Portugal may need Ronaldo more than ever.
Portugal coach Carlos Queiroz has tried to ease the tension surrounding Ronaldo's goalscoring difficulties. When asked about it last week he replied, in English, "Leave them kids alone."
"The more you leave the players in peace the more they'll score," he added.
While he waves away talk of a crisis, Ronaldo's recent comments and performances have betrayed the nagging pressure.
In a 3-1 win against Cameroon in an exhibition match 10 days ago, Ronaldo time and again went for goal only to see the goalkeeper produce a superb reflex save or stick out a foot to deny him, and the anguish showed on his face.
When reporters tried to ask him questions after the match he walked away saying, with a gesture towards his teammates,
   "Talk to them, they're the heroes."
  Ronaldo was left off Portugal's starting lineup for Tuesday's warmup game against Mozambique in Johannesburg as Queiroz handed Danny a rare start. Ronaldo came on for the last 30 minutes and, after the goalkeeper failed to hold his thundering shot with 10 minutes to go, Hugo Almeida tapped in the ball for the final 3-0 score.
Some standout performances from Ronaldo could lend precious momentum to Portugal's ambitions in South Africa where it faces a hard task advancing from Group G, which also includes Brazil and North Korea.
Portugal is ranked third in the world by FIFA and reached the semifinals of the 2006 World Cup in Germany. But for all its star players' skills it still has no silverware. [end story]

There is no doubt that Cristiano is feeling the pressure.  The Ronny PR Train has been rolling downhill for a while now.  It speeds faster with every endorsement, personal appearance, and commercial in which he appears.  His game needs to follow suit on the world's biggest stage if he's to stop the train from crashing.
His confidence has taken a blow since leaving Manchester.  Of the 70 goals scored in the last two seasons, the majority were scored with United, but the number isn't important.  The goals he scored with United had an end result...championships and trophies.  His goals with Real amounted to a big NOTHING...and Ronny knows that.
Without Nani, he's going to have to dig deep within and find the same heart he had in Manchester.
Come on, Ronny...you can do it!



Portugal's Group Schedule:
June 15: vs. Ivory Coast (Port Eliz.)

June 21: vs. North Korea (Cape Town)
June 25: vs. Brazil (Durban)

No comments:

Post a Comment