Cristiano Ronaldo is, unquestionably,
one of the world’s best players. On pure talent, he’s Portugal’s best and most
important player by far. But in Euro 2016, one factor trumped all that talent:
Ronaldo’s leadership.
It’s not something that’s often been
talked about over the years. At Manchester United he was too young and on a
team too full of veterans to be a leader. Real Madrid has often been a team
more about overwhelming with talent at every position, so leadership takes a
back seat to everything else.
It’s easy, then, to overlook the idea
of Ronaldo as a leader, but he’s reached the point in his career when
leadership often becomes a major factor. He’s 31 years old now, his legs are
slowing and other things have to come up to fill in the gaps. Given his public
reputation and perception of being a selfish player, he’s slowly been becoming
anything but -- someone who looks to lead and inspire his team through more
than just his actions on the pitch.
That leadership was on full display
at Euro 2016. Even when Ronaldo wasn’t playing at his best, he was constantly
directing, encouraging and pushing his teammates to the best performances that
he could. He did everything he could to inspire his teammates. Against Poland, Ronaldo
told Joao Moutinho to take one of Portugal’s penalties in the shootout because
he knew Moutinho would make it.
On Sunday in the Euro 2016 final, he told Eder
that he knew Eder would score the winning goal. For the "but he’s so
selfish" crowd, this wasn't Ronaldo tooting his own horn by telling us
about those words. His pep talk for Moutinho was revealed by a video clip of
their talk that came out after the match. Eder told the media what Ronaldo told
him during the celebration after their triumph.
And what about that final? Ronaldo
had to leave it just 25 minutes into the match after almost 20 minutes of
struggling to push his way through a knee injury. His teammates saw what this
game meant to him and how agonizing it was to leave, so they pushed through to
a victorious performance as much for him as it was for themselves. There are
not many players who could inspire such a response, but Ronaldo did.
But that’s not where Ronaldo’s story
ended for the final. As soon as Portugal’s doctors cleared him, he was back out
on the bench, talking to his teammates, talking to his manager, giving ideas
and hope and firing everyone up before extra time started. He spent a lot of
his time on the touchline right next to Fernando Santos, giving instructions
and advice to his teammates on the pitch right alongside his manager.
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