Now
everyone wants to talk to the Real Madrid star but getting an interview
is a tall order these days, although he has given hundreds in the past
14 years.
The very first was given to Portuguese television
channel Sport TV when he was a youth at Sporting Clube de Portugal and
had started training with the first team.
They were attending the
start of training at the youth sides of the major clubs to try to spot
stars in the making, and reporter Jaime Cravo was told about a young man
called Cristiano Ronaldo who had every chance of getting into the first
team.
"I accompanied him from Estadio Jose Alvalade to a hostel
in Marques de Pombal in central Lisbon where he lived," the journalist
explained about his first moments with the player.
The lodgings
are, oddly enough, very close to where he ended up staying after winning
his first Champions League with Real in Lisbon.
At the time, the teenager earned between 1,000 and 1,500 euros a month and gave all his wages to his mother.
"When I need something I call her and she puts some money in my account," the youngster explained.
This caught Cravo's attention as he felt it spoke volumes about the boy's personality, who was not intimidated by anything.
Nowadays, the ex-Manchester United player is used to high-speed cars but in those days he used the metro to get to training.
He was not in college but trained every morning and some afternoons.
In
his spare time he liked to play the slot machines in a cafe next to the
stadium or walking through Lisbon, although the evenings he spent alone
in Hostel Dom Jose where he lived.
He shared a room with another
youth player, Miguel Paixao, who played for Clube Oriental de Lisboa in
the second division until recently, and lived in the hostel for nearly
six months before the club inaugurated their academy in 2002.
Life was far removed from the luxurious lifestyle that top-flight players enjoy today.
In
the interview, Cristiano talks with a roommate about buying a very
expensive console, never imagining that two years later money would not
be a problem for him after signing for the Red Devils and then moving on
to Los Blancos.
Paixao will never forget the day a Real Madrid
match was being shown on television in their room and just laughed when
his friend said: "I'll play there one day."
"I'm serious, one day I'll wear that shirt," he insisted but Paixao smiled and thought no more about it.
But
these were not just idle words and the Sport TV journalist also recalls
that Cristiano claimed he would be the best in the world one day.
Certainly his commitment to training - and being the fastest - could not be faulted.
"In
the street by the hostel, cars had to stop at the traffic lights and he
ran to see who was the fastest - himself or the car," his then teammate
explained.
His quirky habits certainly stuck in people's minds
and the hostel owner also likes to boast about the star who once lived
there.
At Euro 2004 he told a group of Croatian fans but they called him a liar.
Unfortunately
for them they did not take photos of room 34 where once slept a young
player who would later become one of the best players in football
history.



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