Pique: Ronaldo fuelled by Messi rivalry
The 26-year-old admits he admires his former Manchester United
team-mate's ambition and claimed Barcelona are "a poor club" when
compared to Real Madrid's spending policy.


Barcelona defender Gerard Pique says Cristiano Ronaldo is fuelled by his rivalry with Lionel Messi as it constantly drives him to improve.
The
Real Madrid forward has finished runner-up to the Argentina
international in the Ballon d'Or for the previous two seasons as the
attacking duo continue to vye for the title of the world's best player.
Pique,
who played with Ronaldo briefly at Manchester United, feels the
28-year-old is motivated by the constant comparisons with Messi and has
praised the Portugal captain for his ambition.
"Cristiano Ronaldo has not changed since we were both at Manchester United,” he told So Foot. "He remains the same."He is a player I’'ve always admired because he is a hard worker who always wants more and more. He is really ambitious.
"For me, he is in the top two or three in the world and still wants progress.
"I believe that his rivalry with [Lionel] Messi has helped Cristiano Ronaldo to always go further."
Pique went on to highlight the difference in spending between Barcelona and Madrid over recent seasons, suggesting the Blaugrana have performed admirably to keep pace with their bitter rivals given the comparative outlay in the transfer market.
"We are a poor club, but we are the rival of the world's richest club," Pique continued.
"If
you look at the starting 11 of Madrid and see all the money they have
spent to build it up, then you see there is no possible way for
Barcelona to compare.
"They went a year without winning a major
title and invested €160 million on three players, [Asier] Illaramendi,
Isco and [Gareth] Bale. We can pay €60 or €70m for Neymar, but that's
it."
Pique once more suggested Barca are "slaves" to the style of
football ingrained in players from youth level upwards in Catalunya,
adding that the more "individualistic" players of los Blancos are more likely to adapt to other sides.
"I
think we are slaves to our style, in the sense that a player made in La
Masia will have problems on a team that does not have the same identity
and which, for example, does not like to have the ball.
"In comparison, a player trained in Madrid is more individualistic, which is not bad because it means you can fit anywhere.
"If
you look at the big leagues you will see that there is always more
former Real players like [Esteban] Granero, [Alvaro] Negredo, [Ronerto]
Soldado and [Juan] Mata."
No comments:
Post a Comment