Ricardinho: Futsal King Who Combines the Qualities of Ronaldo, Messi

 Ricardinho is captain of Portugal’s history-making futsal seleção and has been named best player in the world for the last five years. Photograph: Pedro Fiuza/Pedro Fiuza/Zuma Press/PA
Ricardinho is captain of Portugal’s history-making futsal seleção and has been named best player in the world for the last five years. Photograph: Pedro Fiuza/Pedro Fiuza/Zuma Press/PA
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Ricardinho: Futsal King Who Combines the Qualities of Ronaldo, Messi

 Ricardinho is captain of Portugal’s history-making futsal seleção and has been named best player in the world for the last five years. Photograph: Pedro Fiuza/Pedro Fiuza/Zuma Press/PA
Ricardinho is captain of Portugal’s history-making futsal seleção and has been named best player in the world for the last five years. Photograph: Pedro Fiuza/Pedro Fiuza/Zuma Press/PA

The greatest of all time debate needs no introduction. But what if there were another dimension to it? What would a hybrid of Cristiano Ronaldo’s and Lionel Messi’s qualities with a ball at their feet look like? The answer is Ricardinho. But his game is not football. It’s futsal.

“If you joined Ronaldo and Messi, that’s how Ricardinho is in futsal,” Jorge Braz, the coach of Portugal’s futsal seleção, told the Guardian shortly after Ricardinho helped his team win the Euros in 2018.

The man nicknamed O Mágico (the magician) is a scaled-down micro-genius of the small-sided game, the personification of a bulging bag of tricks.

The numbers are staggering. Nearly a goal a game in 160-plus caps. The best player in the world a record six times. Aged 33 yet still the standout superstar for club and country, the proud captain of the history-making seleção.

Does he feel the pressure of his status at the pinnacle of football’s little brother? “No,” he says. “It would be worse if you compare me with [any] António or Pedro. Comparing me with Ronaldo and Messi just gives me reasons to be happy.”

Sitting in the futsal hall at Rio Maior sports complex, 40 miles north of Lisbon, Ricardo Filipe da Silva Braga explains how he copes with being the biggest star in the Fifa-sanctioned version of five-a-side now the Brazilian Falcão, Ricardinho’s idol known as “the Pelé of futsal”, has retired.

“I don’t have to be scared,” he says. “I have to be the example here and abroad. I’m an example for a lot of people in futsal. I’m one of those people that are helping to get more people to play the game.”

In countries where the indoor sport is well established, his brand matches up to all but the elite band of A-list multimillionaire footballers. The sport is in a good place too: Fifa noted a 100% rise in participation to 60m from 2010 to 2015. Ricardinho wants it to become an Olympic sport and has hopes that one of his friends, the Brazil left-back Marcelo, will return to his futsal roots once he finishes at Real Madrid.

“Some people say the futsal pitch is way too small for me but I say we have just a few futsal idols. The examples we see people showing to kids these days are Neymar, Ronaldo and others – they are all football players.”

At 1.67m (5ft 6in), Ricardinho stands half an inch shorter than Messi; he is half a year younger than Ronaldo. All three grew up with the fundamentals in common: dreaming of playing professional football while forging their sublime skills and ball mastery on the futsal court. Messi and Ronaldo testify to its role as a laboratory of creativity, learning and purposeful practice in their youth.

Ricardinho’s path was different. Dismissed as too small for football, he was cast aside by his boyhood club, Porto, aged 14. “I have always said my dream was to be a football player,” he says. “However, I haven’t chosen futsal; futsal chose me. I’ve tried to play football and ‘they’ told me I was too small. When futsal chose me, I said: ‘If this is what I’m going to play I want to be the best at it.’”

In the sport renowned for imposing acute limitations on time and space – it’s the equivalent of playing 37-a-side on a football pitch – he is the gamechanger most able to eke out pockets of air and breathe life into contests played out under suffocating intensity. He is the one v one king. The team player like no other.

Ricardinho made his debut for Benfica’s futsal team in 2003 aged 17 and four years later turned down overtures to switch codes from the club’s football team manager, the current Portugal coach Fernando Santos. Ricardinho eventually earned a big-money move to Nagoya Oceans in Japan (equivalent to the lucrative path to China in the modern 11-a-side game). After rejecting their attempt to more than quadruple his salary to €30,000 a month, he “gave them a crazy price”, he says. “I thought they would never accept but the answer was yes.”

High-earning spells on loan at CSKA Moscow and back at Benfica followed before he sealed a dream move to Madrid’s Inter Movistar, the main rivals to Barcelona in the strongest professional league, Spain’s Liga Nacional de Fútbol Sala. There he has excelled for the past six seasons, winning the equivalent of the Ballon d’Or for the past five years.

Ricardinho says his biggest strength is the “speed with which I send information from the brain to the feet”. His array of goals and fleet-footed wizardry are social media gold. Still revered in Japan, he is a cult hero in many other futsal-playing nations, including Serbia, where his outrageous goal against the hosts in the 2016 futsal European Championship went viral.

He has come a long way. His autobiography, La magia acontece donde hay dedicación (Magic happens where there is dedication), chronicles his journey from using oranges or taped-up socks as a ball on the streets of Valbom to his eminence today, likened to the best footballers on the planet. But who does he prefer watching: Messi or Ronaldo?

He laughs loudly, smiles, then quickly turns serious, saying this is “one the biggest problems we see in humanity”. He adds: “We take too long comparing instead of enjoying.”

“Please enjoy,” he implores. “We will never know when we are going to witness players like Ronaldo and Messi again.”

The request to enjoy sounds sensible – and definitely applies to the sight of Ricardinho, the Portuguese micro-magician of the small court.

The Guardian Sport



Man City Rallies to Beat Club Brugge and Advance in Champions League. PSG Also Wins and Stays in

Savinho (R) of Manchester City in action against Joaquin Seys of Brugge during the UEFA Champions League match between Manchester City and Club Brugge in Manchester, Britain, 29 January 2025. EPA/ADAM VAUGHAN
Savinho (R) of Manchester City in action against Joaquin Seys of Brugge during the UEFA Champions League match between Manchester City and Club Brugge in Manchester, Britain, 29 January 2025. EPA/ADAM VAUGHAN
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Man City Rallies to Beat Club Brugge and Advance in Champions League. PSG Also Wins and Stays in

Savinho (R) of Manchester City in action against Joaquin Seys of Brugge during the UEFA Champions League match between Manchester City and Club Brugge in Manchester, Britain, 29 January 2025. EPA/ADAM VAUGHAN
Savinho (R) of Manchester City in action against Joaquin Seys of Brugge during the UEFA Champions League match between Manchester City and Club Brugge in Manchester, Britain, 29 January 2025. EPA/ADAM VAUGHAN

Manchester City stayed in the Champions League, barely. Paris Saint-Germain saved its elite status in style.
Both had risked embarrassing exits before winning on Wednesday, grateful to be among the 24 teams in the knockout stage. In the new playoffs-round draw Friday, they will also find defending champion Real Madrid or Bayern Munich who finished in mid-table after the 36-team standings was finalized.
City flirted with a disaster before rallying to beat Club Brugge 3-1 in a must-win game. Trailing 1-0 at halftime, and then sitting 26th in the live standings, the 2023 title-winner was sparked by substitute Savinho to avoid elimination, the Associated Press reported.
“In the second half we let our souls and hearts free,” said City manager Pep Guardiola, who had an anguished evening on the sidelines and was shown a yellow card.
City finished 22nd but relief turns to the realization that its playoff round opponent will be either Madrid or Bayern, which slotted into the bracket possibilities in, respectively, 11th and 12th place.
PSG started play in 22nd before cruising to a 4-1 win at Stuttgart, fired by Ousmane Dembélé's hat trick, that eliminated the German club.
The French champion impressed again after a crucial 4-2 comeback win over Man City one week ago, and rose to 15th place. Still, that puts PSG on a path to meet either Liverpool or Barcelona in the round of 16 in March if it wins an all-French playoff against either Monaco or Brest.
Liverpool topped the standings despite a 3-2 loss with a weakened team at PSV Eindhoven, and Barcelona ended runner-up after a 2-2 draw with Atalanta.
Only the top eight teams go direct to the round of 16 and that excludes Madrid, which won 3-0 at Brest, and Bayern, a 3-1 winner against Slovan Bratislava.
Inter Milan, Arsenal and Atletico Madrid sealed top-eight finishes as expected with low-key wins. Inter beat Monaco 3-0, Arsenal won 2-1 at Girona and Atletico won 4-1 at Salzburg, which had a woeful campaign.
Bayer Leverkusen, Lille — which thrashed Feyenoord 6-1 — and Aston Villa completed the top eight.
Stuttgart dropped to 26th place and was eliminated along with Dinamo Zagreb, despite its 2-1 win over AC Milan whose United States playmaker Christian Pulisic had leveled the game. Milan can face Juventus in the playoffs round.
Brugge took the 24th qualification place ahead of Dinamo on the tiebreaker of goal difference.
An unprecedented Champions League night of 18 games playing at the same time — completing the new 144-game opening phase format – ended with no shock exits though final standings that defied expectations.
Three English teams finished in the top eight but not Man City.
Two Spanish teams finished in the top eight but not Real Madrid.
The one German team in the top eight is not Bayern, and the one French team is not PSG.
Those four wealthy powers of European soccer found the new eight-game format trickier than expected. They now have the burden of two extra games on back-to-back midweeks in February to earn round of 16 places that were routine in the old group-stage format.
Villa joined Liverpool and Arsenal in the top eight by beating Celtic 4-2 to rise to 16 points — the cut that meant avoiding the playoffs.
UEFA’s preseason prediction of eight points to enter the knockout phase proved far off the mark.
Dinamo got 11 points and still was eliminated, ensuring no team from eastern Europe will be in the knockout phase.
The lowest-ranked country in Friday’s playoffs round draw is Scotland, whose champion Celtic finished 21st, one place and one point above Man City.