Daily Mail

£2.2m ticket to see Ronaldo v Messi in Saudi

Tonight’s friendly is start of Cristiano’s last chapter, but don’t be shocked if his nemesis ends up here too

- RIATH AL-SAMARRAI in Riyadh

A SAUDI businessma­n has paid more than £2million to watch Cristiano ronaldo take on old rival lionel Messi this evening. ronaldo, who signed for Saudi side al-Nassr in december, plays his first match in the kingdom for a local all-Star Xi against Messi’s Paris SaintGerma­in in a prestige friendly. and real-estate mogul Mushref al-Ghamdi shelled out £2.2m at auction for a ViP ticket for the game, which will allow him to meet the two megastars.

He will also be permitted to attend the winners’ ceremony and enter the dressing rooms after ronaldo and Messi’s first meeting since Juventus beat Barcelona 3-0 in 2020.

TWO giants on diverging roads will come together again in a friendly match in Riyadh tonight. If anything could quite capture the surreal nature of the reunion, it is that one man has paid £2.2million to see it.

The chap, Mushref al-Ghamdi, is a real estate mogul. We’re told his ticket to watch one more dance between Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi came via a charity auction entitled ‘Beyond Imaginatio­n’, and that it will gain him entry to the dressing rooms for pictures and some such.

This is Saudi Arabia, of course, and this is sport in 2023. It is a kingdom where status matters and no price is too great, and in everything from football to Formula One, from golf to boxing, it has found realms where few questions are too tricky for a good deal. Which takes us to Ronaldo, whose three weeks here have already earned him close to £10m. Beyond imaginatio­n? That doesn’t fully cover it, somehow.

And yet here we are, watching the beginning of his closing chapters as a profession­al footballer. A footballer whose past eclipses almost all others in the history of ball games but whose present is a curious thing indeed.

This match, played against Messi’s Paris Saint-Germain as part of an ‘all-star’ hybrid of his club Al Nassr and their rivals Al Hilal, will be the first he contests in his new home.

Unlike Messi (right), he isn’t just passing through. And there’s an inevitable comparison there, because with these two greats, one will always be seen in the light of the other.

For Messi, the game is part of his victory lap, and no doubt tied to his sideline gig as an ambassador for Saudi’s tourism drive. He arrives as an athlete on top of the world and finally has that one particular medal to settle a number of arguments.

For Ronaldo, it is quite something else, coming five weeks after his World Cup ended in tears as a marginalis­ed substitute with Portugal, and nine after his Manchester United career was terminated for the draining of his spleen to Piers Morgan. To think, it has been seven years since he responded to criticisms from Xavi by saying: ‘ Xavi plays in Qatar. He has no relevance.’ Needless to say, Ronaldo can move in unexpected ways, but relevance is a relative term.

In a sporting sense, he is indisputab­ly seeing out his playing days among a cast of teammates largely unknown beyond Saudi Arabia, and is doing so in a division that is the equivalent of a walk from Manchester to Mecca away from the Champions League he won five times. But in other contexts, he might just be the most relevant of all sportsmen, even at 37, when you consider the forces that recruited him.

For £173m per year for two-anda-half seasons, he will be used as a symbol and a message, the purity and direction of which depends on your point of view. That recurring question of sportswash­ing, and those around human rights in Saudi Arabia, has accompanie­d this most eye-catching of scenarios, just as it has the kingdom’s huge involvemen­t in other sports across recent years.

To speak this week to Minky Worden, a director at Human Rights Watch, was to hear an unequivoca­l opinion.

She told Sportsmail: ‘Situations like this attempt to change the conversati­on from human rights repression.’

Sportsmail met yesterday with the general secretary of the Saudi Arabia Football Federation, Ibrahim Al Kassim.

His estimate is that 80 per cent of their population follow the sport, and that Ronaldo will serve as an ‘inspiratio­n’ in a plan for the country to reach the top 20 in FIFA’s rankings by 2034.

When we asked about suggestion­s of sportswash­ing, he said: ‘Do you think if it was sportswash­ing, we would have won against Argentina in Qatar? No, it is about the developmen­t of football and Saudi Arabia.’

Some will raise eyebrows, many will just watch the goals.

Time will tell where a bid to stage the World Cup fits in all this, and likewise how much more of the sporting landscape will be bought up by the Saudis. Ronaldo is clearly the biggest coup to date in that latter regard, and by extension his relevancy is potentiall­y bigger than ever.

Who knows what his old rival makes of it all. Though if the whispers are to be believed, it might not be too long before he is back in these parts — and for more than friendlies and tourism ads.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Saudi partner: Ronaldo trains at new club Al Nassr and (inset) is welcomed to Riyadh
GETTY IMAGES Saudi partner: Ronaldo trains at new club Al Nassr and (inset) is welcomed to Riyadh
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