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Published 18:42 4 Feb 2015 GMT
Updated 18:40 4 Feb 2015 GMT
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Ronaldo was the victim of the greatest con on earth.
When Messi's camp fooled everyone into thinking he was this pure, humble, all-about-the-football team player. Cristiano - perhaps because he was better looking, more marketable, more in the media - was portrayed as the devil for a period. Lionel, meanwhile, became the anti-Ronaldo.
The Madrid forward was held up as almost a cautionary image, one that every young footballer should avoid. You don't want to become this selfish, preening ego-maniac. Messi was the polar opposite. The good guy. The football guy. Allegedly.
In time, the truth unraveled. The more the Argentine was exposed in the media, the more layers of his mask that began to peel away. People realised that Messi, too, had a high opinion of himself - of course he bloody did, he's Lionel Messi, for God's sake.
Pep Guardiola would tell you that he made his start to life as Barca's manager difficult, that he forced the boss's hand to play in the centre, that he pushed Ibrahimovic out the door. Guillem Balague would tell you that Messi was in trouble of going down the wrong path when he first entered the club's senior team. That he was running around with party boy Ronaldinho that, in fact, it wasn't all about the football.
Messi has let slip more and more that he's unhappy at certain things, that he thinks about leaving and this myth that Ronaldo was some kind of a monster slowly evaporated as Leo's own superstar reputation grew.
The first adjective Roy Keane (all genuflect) used to describe Ronaldo in that brilliant documentary, Keane and Vieira: Best of Enemies was attitude. "Great attitude."
Despite what some of his detractors would have you believe, Cristiano has worked damn hard - probably harder than anyone - to get to where he is. Jese Rodriguez summed it up perfectly:
"I remember the first time I went to Real Madrid's training. I got there two hours early to impress my coaches but when I reached the ground I saw Cristiano Ronaldo already training."
Ronaldo is a hero in his own right. He isn't a cautionary tale for aspiring professionals. He is an inspiration.
6. The loved good-guy figure that he is now
As much as we love Ronaldo, we'd still be very surprised if he is always the wholesome, loving, family man that he suddenly has become.
Guillem Balague spoke at an event in Derry last year about how he would love to do his next book on Cristiano but that the Portuguese star was undergoing an image transformation at the time.
Now, his son - as adorable as he is - is coming to his dad's embrace on camera a lot. Ronaldo - who we're sure is a genuine good guy - is being captured giving so much more time to random kids, his charity work is phenomenal but it's always publicised, he's being pictured with his mother, and generally just being a good guy in the public's eye. No-one has a problem with that, the influx of it all is just curious though.
7. Retirement
At 30, we reckon Ronaldo could dominate for another six years at least. He's powerful, fast, athletic but that isn't all that he's about. He's a fine player with a fine head on him and his passing, vision, and technical abilities even are probably sometimes overlooked because of what a specimen he is.
His retirement is a while away yet but here's the seventh age of Cristiano Ronaldo. Later life. Relax and enjoy yourself, Ronnie. You've kept yourself in good condition for long enough.

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