Home ›› 04 Jan 2023 ›› Sport
Few expected Cristiano Ronaldo to rock up in Riyadh but Saudi Arabia’s Al Nassr came up with the cash when it counted to pull off the biggest coup in Gulf football history.
Despite a stack of domestic titles the Riyadh outfit has seen little success on the wider stage, enjoying their best days in Gulf and Asian competition in the 1990s.
Bulgarian striker Hristo Stoichkov, like Ronaldo a former Ballon d’Or winner, scored the only goal in their finest triumph when Al Nassr, known as “The International”, lifted the 1998 Asian Cup Winners Cup.
Al Nassr will now hope Ronaldo, a surprise capture for an estimated 200 million euros until June 2025, can fire them to the Asian Champions League victories enjoyed by rivals Al Hilal and Al Ittihad.
The club is even eyeing other high-profile coups, including Real Madrid’s Croatian playmaker Luka Modric and France midfielder N’Golo Kante, said an official who asked not to be named.
“We will celebrate Ronaldo tomorrow and continue to work... towards high-level signings,” he said, adding that Al Nassr is looking to put together the “new galacticos”.
Stoichkov, who played only two matches, was the last superstar to pull on the shirt of Al Nassr, who were formed as an amateur team in 1955 and have racked up nine Saudi league titles.
Ronaldo, 37, is on a different level again, bagging five Ballons d’Or as he collected five European Champions League titles and a host of domestic honours, along with a considerable personal fortune and millions of adoring fans.
While the resource-rich Gulf has attracted its share of ageing stars, including George Weah, Pep Guardiola and Xavi, the Portuguese -- and his enormous salary -- is taking the region’s football into uncharted waters.