They are the best players in the world
 but they will never be best friends. When Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel 
Messi go head-to-head on Tonight, there will be a brief 
acknowledgement but nothing else.
Really,
 though, they should go out of their way to thank each other. Every time
 Ronaldo sparkles for Real Madrid, Messi inevitably tries to go one 
better for Barcelona. The results have been spectacular and it means 
Spanish football is now essential viewing.
But
 watch them in the second leg of the Copa Del Rey semi-final – and again
 on Saturday in la Liga – and you will see nothing more than a cursory 
handshake. You don’t need to be a body language expert to appreciate 
there is no love lost between these two.
The question both men should be asking, however, is this: where would I be without you
You
 have to question whether their statistics would be so incredible if one
 was playing in another league. When Ronaldo scored a hat-trick last 
month against Getafe, Messi scored four the night after against Osasuna. 
All that was missing from 
his performance was him lifting his shirt to reveal the message 
'anything you can do, I can do better.'
Messi
 has always been a top player and is surrounded by magicians in Xavi and
 Andres Iniesta but you can argue that Ronaldo’s £80million move from 
Manchester United in 2009 took his game to another level. Statistics 
back that up.
f you look at a breakdown of how Messi
 has reached 300 goals, the first 80 came in 161 games. In the 204 
matches he has played since Ronaldo arrived at the Bernabeu, Messi has 
rattled in 221, as if to hammer home the point he is the best in the 
world.
Ronaldo, of course, 
would never acknowledge that nor would he say that trying to outwit 
Messi has taken his game to another level – he scored 118 goals for 
Manchester United in 292 appearances but, for Madrid, his tally is 183 
goals in 182 matches. 
His 
enmity towards Messi really surfaced last summer at Euro 2012, when 
Denmark fans barracked him during a game against Portugal, chanting 
'Messi!' every time he got possession.
‘You
 know where he was this time last year,’ Ronaldo asked after the game. 
‘Being eliminated from the Copa America. In his own country. That is 
worse, no?’ 
Further proof 
arrived via the voting for the Ballon D’Or, which Messi won for a fourth
 time recently. As captain of Argentina, Messi was given a vote and his 
top three choices were Iniesta, Xavi and Atletico Madrid’s Radamel 
Falcao. 
Ronaldo, 
meanwhile, also got the chance to vote, as he is captain of Portugal. 
Yet he turned down the chance and handed responsibility to his deputy 
Bruno Alves. Unsurprisingly, Alves picked Ronaldo as his number one and 
left Messi off his shortlist.
Source: daily mail
 


 
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