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News > Latin America

Brazil Legend Ronaldinho to Retire

  • Brazil's soccer player Ronaldinho

    Brazil's soccer player Ronaldinho | Photo: Reuters

Published 16 January 2018
Opinion

Ronaldinho has not played a competitive match since 2015 but had avoided calling a definitive halt to his career until now.

Former Brazil national team and Barcelona midfielder Ronaldinho, who won a World Cup in 2002, the Champions League 2006, Copa Libertadores in 2013 and the FIFA World Player of the Year (current Ballon d'Or) in 2005, is retiring from the game, his brother and agent Assis said on Tuesday.

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“He’s stopped. It’s over,” Assis told the Rio de Janeiro newspaper Jornal O Globo. “We’re going to do something pretty big, something cool, after the World Cup in Russia, probably in August.”

The events, most likely farewell matches, will take place in Brazil, Europe and Asia, and could include a match with the national team, Assis said.

Ronaldinho, who will be 38 in March, began his career with Gremio and played for seven other clubs, including Paris Saint-Germain, AC Milan, Queretaro and Brazilian sides Flamengo, Atletico Mineiro and Fluminense.

But it was in Barcelona between 2003 and 2008 where he spent his glory years, turning in some of the greatest performances ever seen by the storied Spanish club, perhaps most memorably a 3-0 win over Real Madrid at the Bernabeu in 2005.

He helped guide the Catalan side to the Champions League in 2006, La Liga in 2005 and 2006 and won the Ballon D’Or in 2005.

Ronaldinho left for Milan in 2008 and won the Scudetto there in 2011, before heading back to Brazil and taking Atletico Mineiro to their first Copa Libertadores title in 2013.

He never again reached the heights he scaled at Barca for prolonged periods, though he remained a captivating presence, known for his no-look passes, superb free kicks and free-wheeling style that typified the way Brazilians play the game.

He played 101 times for Brazil, scoring 35 goals including a 40-yard free kick that knocked England out the 2002 World Cup.

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