Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Ronaldo cried, sneaked out at night to live his dreams

- Omnisport

MADRID : Real Madrid star Cristiano Ronaldo has revealed he used to sneak out of Sporting Lisbon’s academy to work out as an 11-year-old in order to get stronger.

Ronaldo always knew he had the talent to succeed in football, but grew frustrated by coaches’ comments about his size.

Discussing the difficulti­es he faced after leaving hometown Madeira to start his time in Sporting’s youth system aged just 11, Ronaldo pinpointed where his desire to improve his physicalit­y began.

“I cried almost every day,” Ronaldo wrote in The Players’ Tribune. “I was still in Portugal, but it was like moving to another country. The accent made it like a completely different language.

“The culture was different. I didn’t know anybody, and it was extremely lonely. My family could only afford to visit me every four months. I was missing them so much that it was very painful.

“Football kept me going. I knew I was doing things on the field that the other kids couldn’t do. I remember the first time I heard one of them say to another kid, ‘Did you see what he did? This guy is a beast’.

“I started hearing it all the time. Even from the coaches. But then somebody would always say, ‘Yeah but it’s a shame he’s so small’.

“And it’s true, I was skinny. I had no muscle. So I made a decision at 11.

“I knew I had a lot of talent, but I decided that I was going to work harder than everybody. I was going to stop playing like a kid. I was going to stop acting like a kid. I was going to train like I could be the best in the world.

“I don’t know where this feeling came from. It was just inside of me. It’s like a hunger that never goes away. When you lose, it’s like you’re starving. When you win, it’s still like you’re starving, but you ate a little. This is the only way I can explain it.

“I started sneaking out of the dormitory at night to work out. I got bigger and faster. And then I would walk onto the field and the people who used to whisper, “Yeah, but he’s so skinny?’ Now they would look at me like it was the end of the world.

“When I was 15, I turned to some of my team-mates during training. I remember it clearly. I said to them, ‘I’ll be the best in the world ’. They were kind of laughing about it. I wasn’t even on Sporting’s first team yet, but I had that belief. I really

meant it.”

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