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Brazil's big question: Is Ronaldo fat?

Even country's president weighs in on weighty issue about star

Image: Parreira, Ronaldo
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Coach Carlos Alberto Parreira, left, of Brazil gives intructions to Ronaldo duirng a training session at Koenigstein in the outskirts of Frankfurt, Germany, on Wednesday.
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updated 8:49 a.m. ET June 10, 2006

KOENIGSTEIN, Germany - “So, what is it?” Brazil’s president wanted to know.

“Is he fat or not?”

Speaking from his office in Brasilia, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva put the question directly to his country’s soccer coach.

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“He is very strong, president,” Carlos Alberto Parreira promised. “He is not that boy anymore. His body type has changed.”

Poor Ronaldo.

Some weighty questions are being asked of the superstar striker as the World Cup gets under way, and on Friday he said he was sick of it.

“I think I deserve a lot more respect because of my services in the national team,” he said. “I think it’s ridiculous. ...”

With four days to go before the defending champion team’s opening match, Ronaldo said he is disappointed with how he’s being treated by the media, and surprised by all the talk about his weight and recent ailments, including blisters on his feet.

“People shouldn’t care about this,” he said. “What difference does it make?”

Ronaldo said he understands he attracts a lot of attention — it comes with the job when your team is picked to win a record sixth World Cup. Still, he said, he “shouldn’t have to pay a price” for being who he is.

Not everyone agrees.

Splashed across the front page of one of Brazil’s largest daily papers, O Globo, was a cartoon of a paunchy Ronaldo tipping a scale, a thermometer in his mouth, his feet soaking.

“If I get rid of all this ... all is well,” the caption said.

Later Friday, Silva sent a fax to the player saying his comments were meant to end speculation, and that he didn’t mean to put Ronaldo’s condition in doubt, the Brazilian Soccer Confederation said.

Ronaldo received the fax after practice, CBF spokesman Rodrigo Paiva said Saturday.

Exactly how fat is he? U.S. government guidelines say not very for a 6-foot man.

Ronaldo currently weighs 189 pounds, according to his official Web site. Brazilian doctors won’t confirm or deny the information, or say how much weight he has lost since the beginning of Brazil’s training.

FIFA lists Ronaldo at 180 pounds, five more than in the 2002 World Cup in South Korea and Japan, when he weighed 169 pounds.

According to a Body Mass Index chart published by the U.S. government last year, Ronaldo would be considered overweight, but not obese. The healthy range for his height is 144-to-177 pounds.

Ronaldo — not to be confused with teammates Ronaldinho, Robinho or Roberto Carlos — admitted he arrived at Brazil’s World Cup training camp above his ideal weight. That’s normal, he reasoned, considering he didn’t play for almost two months because of an injury.

“I think maybe the president may have been influenced for the lack of responsibility of the media,” Ronaldo said. “When the media insists about a subject, even the president may end up being influenced.”

The president wasn’t exactly discreet: He asked his question during a video conference pep talk attended by most of the Brazilian team and while Ronaldo was in his room with a fever.

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Brazilian doctors said they’ve never worried about Ronaldo’s condition, and guaranteed he will be fit for the defending champion’s opener against Croatia on Tuesday in Berlin.

But Silva isn’t the only one wondering about Ronaldo’s poundage.

All-time soccer great Pele recently criticized Ronaldo as did former France star Michel Platini, who said the Real Madrid player “has too many years” and is “carrying too many kilos.”

The 29-year-old star insisted such comments were coming from people who were “not well-informed.”

“It’s complicated to understand someone’s ideal weight,” Ronaldo said. “The ideal weight is the one that makes the player feel well.”

Weight isn’t Ronaldo’s only headache. He has been bothered by a series of injuries since the beginning of the year and a muscle injury forced him to miss action for most of April and May.

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His latest ailment was a mild respiratory infection, which kept him from practicing with the team Thursday. He also had blisters, which benched him for Brazil’s warmup match against New Zealand last Sunday at halftime.

“I was surprised with the repercussions, people were talking about the blister for three or four days,” Ronaldo said. “Everything was about the blister, they were putting my capacity in doubt because of the blister.”

Parreira has guaranteed Ronaldo will be in the starting lineup for the opener even though many have been saying youngster Robinho would be a better choice.

“Of course Ronaldo will start in the opener,” Parreira said. “The team is set, and Ronaldo is included.”

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Of course, he is.

In the 99 matches Ronaldo has played for Brazil, the team has lost only eight times. He is tied with Pele with 12 World Cup goals and is only three away from becoming the tournament’s all-time leading scorer. He also could equal Pele’s feat as a three-time World Cup winner.

“I’m very focused on the World Cup, and only on the World Cup,” Ronaldo said. “Nothing else worries me now. I’m disappointed with a few things, but there’s nothing I can do.”

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