Born in Porto Alegre, Ronaldinho is a footballer who currently plays for
Flamengo and the Brazilian national team. As a free-kick specialist, he
started off playing for Grêmio, then later for clubs Paris
Saint-Germain, Barcelona and Milan. He is a two-time winner of the FIFA
World Player of the Year and has also been honored with European
Footballer of the Year and FifPro Player of the Year.
Professional soccer player. Born as Ronaldo
de Assis Moreira on March 21, 1980 in Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Ronaldinho's father, Joo Moreira, was a former professional soccer
player who also worked as a welder in a shipyard, and his mother,
Miguelina de Assis, was a cosmetics saleswoman who later became a nurse.
Ronaldinho's older brother, Roberto Assis, was also a professional
soccer player; Ronaldinho was surrounded by soccer from the day he was
born. "I come from a family where soccer has always been very present,"
he says. "My uncles, my father and my brother were all players. Living
with that kind of background, I learned a great deal from them. I tried
to devote myself to it more and more with the passage of time."
In particular, Ronaldinho idolized his father. "He was one of the
most important people for me and in my career, even though he died when I
was very young," he says. (Joo Moreira suffered a fatal heart attack
when Ronaldinho was eight years old.) "He gave me some of the best
advice I've ever had. Off the field: Do the right thing and be an
honest, straight-up guy. And on the field: Play soccer as simply as
possible. He always said one of the most complicated things you can do
is to play it simple."
Ronaldinho began playing organized youth soccer at the age of seven,
and it was as a youth soccer player that he first received the nickname
"Ronaldinho," the diminutive form of his birth name Ronaldo. "They
always called me that when I was little because I was really small," the
player explains, "and I played with players who were older than me.
When I got to the senior national team there was another Ronaldo, so
they started calling me Ronaldinho because I was younger."
Growing up in a relatively poor, hardscrabble neighborhood,
Ronaldinho's youth teams had to make due with makeshift playing fields.
"The only grass on the field was in the corner," Ronaldinho remembers.
"There was no grass in the middle! It was just sand." In addition to
soccer, Ronaldinho also played futsal — an offshoot of soccer played
indoors on a hard court surface and with only five players on each side.
Ronaldinho's early experiences with futsal helped shape his unique
playing style, marked by his remarkable touch and close control on the
ball. "A lot of the moves I make originate from futsal," Ronaldinho
says. "It's played in a very small space, and the ball control is
different in futsal. And to this day my ball control is pretty similar
to a futsal player's control."
Ronaldinho quickly developed into one of Brazil's most talented youth
soccer players. When he was thirteen years old, he once scored a
ridiculous 23 goals in a single game.
While leading his team to a variety of junior championships, Ronaldinho
immersed himself in Brazil's long and glorious soccer history, studying
past greats such as Pele, Rivelino and Ronaldo and dreaming of following
in their footsteps. Then, in 1997, a teenaged Ronaldinho won a call-up
to Brazil's Under-17 national team. The squad won the FIFA Under-17
World Championship in Egypt and Ronaldinho was selected as the
tournament's best player. That same year,
Ronaldinho signed his first professional contract to play for Grmio,
one of the most celebrated teams in the Brazilian league. Two years
later, in 1999, Ronaldinho was invited to join the senior Brazilian
national team to compete in the Confederations Cup in Mexico. Brazil
placed second in the tournament and Ronaldinho won the Golden Ball Award
as the tournament's best player as well as the Golden Boot Award as its
leading goal scorer.
Firmly established as a star on the international stage, in 2001
Ronaldinho left Brazil for Europe, signing a contract to play for Paris
Saint-Germain in France. A year later, he participated in his first
World Cup on a loaded Brazilian squad that also featured Ronaldo and
Rivaldo. Ronaldinho scored two goals in five matches as Brazil defeated
Germany in the finals to win its fifth World Cup title. The next year,
in 2003, Ronaldinho fulfilled a lifelong dream by joining FC Barcelona
of the Spanish league, one of the world's most storied clubs, and
winning the legendary No. 10 jersey typically worn by the squad's
greatest creative player. In 2004 and 2005, Ronaldinho won back-to-back
FIFA World Player of the Year awards, the sport's highest individual
honor. In 2008, Ronaldinho left Barcelona to join another of the world's
most prestigious clubs, A.C. Milan in Italy's Serie A.
In the 2006 World Cup, Ronaldinho headlined a very talented Brazilian
squad that entered the tournament with sky-high expectations. The
tournament ended in disappointment, though, when France knocked Brazil
out with a stunning upset in the quarterfinals. Despite his strong
desire to play, Ronaldinho was not included on the 2010 Brazilian team
that competed in the World Cup in South Africa.
In 2005, Ronaldinho and Brazilian dancer Janaína Mendes had a son, named Joo after Ronaldinho's late father.
An absolute wizard with a soccer ball, Ronaldinho is widely
considered the greatest player of his generation and one of the greatest
players in world history. He says that his soccer career has been an
emotional roller coaster filled with high highs, low lows and a lifetime
of unforgettable moments. "For me soccer provides so many emotions, a
different feeling every day," Ronaldinho says. "I've had the good
fortune to take part in major competitions like the Olympics, and
winning the World Cup was also unforgettable. We lost in the Olympics
and won in the World Cup, and I'll never forget either feeling."
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