"Cristiano wasn't born a genius": Cristiano Ronaldo vs Lionel Messi debate reignites after Luiz Felipe Scolari’s stunning Ballon d’Or voting confession

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 Cristiano Ronaldo vs Lionel Messi debate reignites after Luiz Felipe Scolari’s stunning Ballon d’Or voting confession

Lionel Messi vs. Cristiano Ronaldo (Getty Images)

Luiz Felipe Scolari has spoken openly about one of football's most sensitive subjects, the Ronaldo-Messi debate, and what he revealed goes well beyond poll preferences. The former Portugal coach did not just explain who he voted for.

He explained why, drawing a distinction between natural genius and manufactured greatness that cuts to the heart of what makes Cristiano Ronaldo's career unlike any other in football history. With the 2026 World Cup approaching, and both men poised for record sixth tournament appearances, Scolari's account arrives at the right time.

Why Did Scolari Always Vote for Ronaldo Over Messi?

The answer, as Scolari told the Abre Aspas programme, is personal. "Messi told me: 'Boss, you never voted for me for the Ballon d'Or, you always voted for Cristiano.'

And I replied: 'I have to vote for Cristiano, he's like a son to me.'"

But sentiment alone did not drive the decision. Scolari made a clear-eyed observation: "Messi is a genius. If he closes his eyes, he knows where the ball is. Cristiano wasn't born a genius. He became a genius through his will and dedication."That distinction matters more than it sounds. Messi arrived with gifts that coaches can only hope to nurture.

Ronaldo, by contrast, built himself. Scolari witnessed this construction process directly, receiving regular calls from Sir Alex Ferguson during Ronaldo's Manchester United years, warning him that the young forward was training to exhaustion after full matches."Ferguson would call me and say, 'Scolari, tell him not to take free kicks today, because he's already taken 30 here.' And then he'd arrive at the national team and want to take another 30.

I'd say, 'For God's sake, you've already done that.' But that's his dedication," Scolari recalled.

What Moment Defined Scolari's Bond With Ronaldo?

Statistics and training hours explain part of it. A moment in Moscow explains the rest.Before a crucial match, Scolari was the one who had to inform Ronaldo that his father, Dinis Aveiro, had passed away. "I called him into my room, hugged him, cried with him, and told him he was free to go. And he replied: 'First the national team.

My father would want me to play.' And he was the best player on the field in that game. That's how I developed a stronger friendship with the family as well."That response, choosing duty and playing the best game of a dreadful night, tells you something about Ronaldo that training data never could.Scolari also backed Ronaldo to reach 1,000 career goals, recounting a conversation where Ronaldo denied chasing the milestone before Scolari called the bluff.

"I think he'll achieve it," the Brazilian said flatly.For Ronaldo, now 41, the 2026 World Cup is the final opportunity for the one trophy his cabinet still lacks. For Messi, it is a chance to defend the crown Argentina claimed in Qatar. Scolari's story does not resolve the rivalry. But it does remind us that behind the numbers, there were people, coaches, fathers, and nights in Moscow that shaped both of them in ways the highlights never show.

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