The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Ronaldo takes on his mentor Queiroz after bitter parting of ways

Portugal’s former head coach aims to inspire his Iran team – against a superstar he nurtured

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Agame with as much riding on it as Iranportug­al in Saransk this evening hardly requires a sub-plot but the strained relationsh­ip between two of its main protagonis­ts could prove more than an intriguing sideshow by the end of the night.

The stakes are high regardless, but the desire of the Iran coach, Carlos Queiroz, to get one over his compatriot Cristiano Ronaldo, whom he previously coached with Manchester United and Portugal before things turned sour, should not be underestim­ated given the trenchant personalit­ies involved.

It is almost eight years to the day since Queiroz’s Portugal lost 1-0 to Spain in the last 16 of the World Cup in Cape Town and a frustrated Ronaldo appeared to pin the blame on his manager as he stormed out. “Ask Carlos Queiroz,” the Portugal captain snapped as a reporter sought an explanatio­n for the defeat.

Ronaldo later issued a statement claiming that in the heat of the moment he had not been thinking straight, but Queiroz was unimpresse­d. “We are not unaware of those remarks but we are not here to be friends with the players,” he said. “Portugal needs Ronaldo, and Ronaldo needs the national side, but if this shirt unnerves some players, they have no grounds to be there.”

The friction between manager and player had little time to fester. By September, Queiroz had been sacked, paying the price for a dismal start to qualifying for Euro 2012 and a six-month ban, later annulled, for allegedly disrupting an anti-doping test ahead of the World Cup. Yet Queiroz and Ronaldo’s relationsh­ip has never recovered. “Neither he nor I owe anything to the other,” Queiroz said in 2014. “I have nothing against him but I continue to think that it wasn’t behaviour adequate for the captain of the national team.”

They are not thought to have spoken since but, while no one can be quite sure whether the pair will finally seek to heal old wounds or allow the rift to deepen at the Mordovia Arena tonight, it did not always used to be this way.

At Old Trafford, Queiroz was as much a mentor and father figure to Ronaldo as Sir Alex Ferguson and a key influence in the developmen­t of a player who would eventually join Real Madrid for a then world-record £80million and become arguably the greatest of all time. “The three of them gelled and it brought the best out of his talent,” David Gill, the former United chief executive, told Telegraph Sport. “Cristiano was very ambitious from day one. He wanted to be the best footballer in the world and he saw very clearly in Carlos and Alex the guys who could help him fulfil that ambition.”

Upon joining United in 2002 as Ferguson’s assistant, it was Queiroz who had encouraged the manager to strike up a close working relationsh­ip with Sporting Lisbon given their capacity for unearthing young talent, which led to the clubs embarking on a coaches’ exchange programme.

It was Queiroz who stressed the need to move quickly for Ronaldo since Real and Arsenal were also circling. And once Ronaldo signed for United for £12.24 million in August 2003, it was Queiroz who played a critical role alongside Ferguson in helping the 18-year-old adapt.

Having a fellow Portuguese speaker in tow was probably as reassuring for Ronaldo’s protective mother, Maria Dolores, as the player himself.

It is easy to forget now watching the colossus who scored a hat-trick against Spain and the only goal in Portugal’s victory over Morocco that Ronaldo’s decisionma­king was wayward in his early days at United. Ferguson recalls the tireless work Queiroz did with Ronaldo on the training pitch to iron out over-indulgence.

“In the early days, I accept, he showboated a lot, and Carlos worked hard on that part of his repertoire,” Ferguson wrote in his 2013 autobiogra­phy. “He would say to Cristiano all the time, ‘You’re only a great player when people outside the club start recognisin­g you as such. When you start delivering passes, delivering the crosses at the right time, people won’t be able to read you. That’s when the great players emerge.’ ”

Gill concurs. “Cristiano came over a very young boy, clearly very talented, but also relatively naive in terms of how to use that talent, and the combinatio­n of Carlos and Alex worked wonders, really, for pushing him on,” he said.

One of the most common conversati­ons Queiroz and

Queiroz was as much of a father figure to Ronaldo as Ferguson was

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