Brazilian associaton fooball player (born 1980)
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He grinned through matches like football was a private joke, then made standing ovations happen at the Bernabéu—hostile ground where even Madrid fans couldn't help themselves. The Brazilian who turned Barcelona's early-2000s malaise into a Champions League revival with tricks that looked like they bent physics.
Ronaldo de Assis Moreira broke through at Grêmio in 1998, moved to Paris Saint-Germain at twenty, then landed at Barcelona in 2003 where the prime years arrived fast: back-to-back FIFA World Player of the Year awards, a Ballon d'Or, La Liga titles, and the 2006 Champions League. Two solo goals in El Clásico earned him a standing ovation at the Santiago Bernabéu, only the second Barcelona player after Maradona to receive one. Injuries and waning focus dimmed the spark by 2008; he moved to AC Milan, won Serie A in 2011, then returned to Brazil for Flamengo and Atlético Mineiro, capturing the 201…
News and signals about Ronaldinho
| 2015–2015 | 7 | 0 |
| 2014–2015 | 25 | 8 |
| 2012–2014 | 58 | 20 |
| 2011–2012 | 56 | 23 |
| 2008–2010 | 76 | 20 |
| 2003–2008 | 145 | 70 |
| 2001–2003 | 55 | 17 |
| 2000–2008 | 17 | 2 |
| 1999–2013 | 97 | 33 |
| 1999–1999 | 5 | 3 |
| 1998–2001 | 89 | 47 |
| 1997–1997 | 6 | 2 |
| — | 5 | 8 |
The six component signals behind the Fame score, and their ranks across the leaderboards.
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