Bay of Plenty Times

Own goal: Ronaldo dishes dirt

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Cristiano Ronaldo’s explosive TV interview with Piers Morgan seems certain to end his Manchester United career. It is hard to see a way back for the 37-yearold forward, who said he does not respect manager Erik ten Hag and feels “betrayed” by the club.

The question now is whether Ronaldo can secure a transfer in January after failing to leave for a Champions League club before the start of the season.

United were already planning for life without him before excerpts from his interview began circulatin­g yesterday — but that process is likely to be speeded up after his latest public show of dissent.

Ten Hag already had to censure him for leaving a pre-season friendly early — and cut him from his squad last month when he refused to come on as a substitute against Tottenham.

Ronaldo displayed an element of contrition on social media later and held clear-the-air talks with Ten Hag before being welcomed back into the fold.

But these fresh comments threaten to be a final strike in terms of the Portugal World Cup forward’s relationsh­ip with his manager.

“I don’t have respect for him because he doesn’t show respect for me,” Ronaldo told the Piers Morgan Uncensored TV show.

“If you don’t have respect for me, I’m never gonna have respect for you.”

Ronaldo also claims there is an attempt to push him out of the club.

That comes despite the five-time Ballon d’or winner’s own desire to leave earlier in the year.

Ten Hag was reluctant to let him go in preseason, not least because of a lack of viable replacemen­ts either within his squad or on the market. And that problem remains going into January, when United’s pursuit of a new centre forward will be further complicate­d by typically inflated prices during the mid-season transfer window.

United’s recruitmen­t team would prefer to do their business at the end of the season — and Ten Hag was prepared to make Ronaldo part of his plans for the remainder of the campaign.

The feeling at United on Monday was that Ronaldo’s actions would not be allowed to detract from the positivity generated by Alejandro Garnacho’s late winner in the 2-1 victory at Fulham.

Yet the opposite is true — and the former Real Madrid and Juventus forward’s off-field behaviour has too often been an unwelcome distractio­n during Ten Hag’s four months in charge.

The timing of the interview also ensures it will hang over the club while the Premier League pauses for the World Cup.

Morgan has refused to confirm when it was conducted, which only adds to the impression that it was a premeditat­ed and stage-managed attempt to gain maximum impact.

“The club will consider its response after the full facts have been establishe­d,” United said yesterday.

“Our focus remains on preparing for the second half of the season and continuing the momentum, belief and togetherne­ss being built among the players, manager, staff and fans.”

That statement, itself, suggest the club’s hierarchy was caught by surprise.

The interview could also be interprete­d as a message to potential suitors — and Ronaldo will have to hope more come forward than in preseason.

His reputed salary of around £500,000-a-week ($962,000) rules out the majority of clubs in Europe.

If Ronaldo’s desire is still to play in the Champions League then the number of possible clubs shrinks further, with that competitio­n now down to the last 16.

Another problem is his unconvinci­ng form this season — with just three goals in 18 appearance­s.

A good World Cup could see interest in the veteran striker grow.

In terms of a replacemen­t, the picture is hardly any clearer for United than it was during the last window.

Ten Hag hopes Anthony Martial can overcome the fitness issues that have disrupted his United career and is trying to help Marcus Rashford develop into a prolific scorer.

He may have to rely on that pair until the end of the season at the very least, with Ronaldo’s comments surely signalling an acrimoniou­s end to his time at Old Trafford.

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