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Ronaldo debate sweeps Portugal

Cristiano Ronaldo (left, with Bruno Fernandes) will feature in a record sixth European Championship

Bernardo Silva could not help but laugh when he heard the question about one of the biggest elephants in the room in Portugal.

“In the national team, when you’re all listening to the pre-match team talk, do you accept the tactical instructions right away or sometimes react like, ‘Ronaldo, man, can’t it be another way?’” asked Ricardo Araujo Pereira, a famous comedian and writer, during a show in March.

It was obviously a joke – and the Manchester City midfielder promptly denied that Ronaldo is the one giving orders – but such is the forward’s power within the dressing room that many in the country assume it to be true.

Although he was expected to retire from international football after the last World Cup, the Portugal legend remains a huge influence and will play at a record sixth European Championship this summer in Germany.

“I faced Ronaldo while coaching Everton in 2013,” Portugal manager Roberto Martinez told Canal 11. “For most players, when the body starts failing, the head accepts it. In his case, it seems to be the opposite. The body will only stop when the head says it has to stop.

“It’s incredible when a player of his age has the habits and the desire of an 18-year-old. He has an elite-level mindset and no limits. He’s been with the national team for 20 years now. That’s unique.”
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The former Manchester United star has told Martinez that his goal is to reach 250 Portugal caps. He currently has 207.And still, despite being 39, Ronaldo has indicated he has no plans to leave the international stage.

However, in order to achieve that, he will have to deal with growing criticism from fans back home who believe Portugal perform better without him.

It is nothing new, and followed former coach Fernando Santos and now Martinez.

“Even considering everything Ronaldo represents, it doesn’t make any sense for him to be an undisputed starter any more,” Sofia Oliveira, a football pundit for CNN Portugal, DAZN Portugal and TSF radio, told BBC Sport.

“It’s also true that this transition would be a lot smoother if he realised himself that this role no longer suits him.

“It seems clear to me that his presence in the team conditions other players around him. Just look at their actions and you’ll see that sometimes they search for Ronaldo in contexts that don’t benefit the team. And then there’s the issue that he doesn’t want to spend much time without the ball, so he tracks back to areas occupied by other players, with his positional anarchy affecting them.”

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