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Cristiano Ronaldo suspended by Saudi football body over gesture

Al Nassr captain has made the gesture in response to crowd taunting with Messi name



Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo has come under heavy criticism after seemingly making an offensive gesture following the 3-2 victory over Al Shabab on Sunday.
Image Credit: AP file

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia’s football governing body on Thursday suspended Cristiano Ronaldo for one game over a gesture he made on the pitch last weekend that was judged a “provocation”.

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The Saudi Arabian Football Federation said the Al Nassr captain and former Porto star was also fined a total of 30,000 riyals ($8,000) for the move, which broke rules against provoking the public during a match. The decision cannot be appealed.

Video emerged after his side’s 3-2 win against Al Shabab showing Ronaldo making the gesture in response to crowds taunting him by chanting the name of his longtime rival, Lionel Messi.

Content going viral

The content quickly went viral and surged to the top of Saudi social media trending topics.

Sports newspaper Al Riyadiya reported Ronaldo as saying he respected all football clubs and that the gesture expressed “strength and victory” — not offence — and was considered acceptable in Europe.

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The 39-year-old, a five-time winner of the Uefa Champions League, was the first major star to move to the kingdom when he penned a deal with Al Nassr in January 2023.

Ronaldo celebrates after winning the match against Al Shabab at Prince Faisal Bin Fahd Stadium in Riyadh on February 25.
Image Credit: Reuters

Spending spree

Saudi Pro League teams have gone on a spending spree to lure big-name players, and the country is set to host the 2034 World Cup as part of a broader move into global sport.

France’s Karim Benzema, Brazilian star Neymar and Senegalese striker Sadio Mane have also left Europe behind for bumper pay packets in the conservative kingdom.

But Riyadh has been accused by its critics of “sportswashing” by using athletics to improve its international reputation after widespread criticism of its human rights and environmental record.

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