unhappy in Italy, with frustrations mounting over speculation surrounding his future and his lack of goals, with his side by no means guaranteed a place in the Champions League next season.
Juve are in a better position in the Serie A top-four race than Liverpool are in the Premier League's but they still have work to do, starting today when they take on Fiorentina.
But while Ronaldo might be frustrated, his former side Real Madrid have supposedly ruled out a return, and PSG are said only to be an option if Kylian Mbappé leaves.
He might be annoyed at Juve, but staying there next season remains likely, with few clubs able to afford him. That puts Ronaldo in a familiar position to a few players this summer.
Ronaldo might be frustrated, as might many others (not that Salah is - that was just an example from a Liverpool perspective), but there is little he can do about it.
Lots of clubs might want to splash the cash this summer, but, as the Super League has proven even further, many will simply not have the funds to be able to do so.
That will have a knock-on effect at the smaller clubs, too. If a 'big six' club doesn't buy one of the better players from a team lower down the table, that club lower down can't spend on those clubs below it, and so on and so forth.
The landscape of the summer will be interesting, and it will underline just how desperate clubs are after a season without fans and a lack of revenue.
But it all starts at the top, as Ronaldo might be about to find out.
FSG takeover bid mooted
Liverpool owners FSG have reportedlyturned down a £3bn offer to buy the club from the Middle East.
The report, originating in the Daily Mirror, suggests that there are also other possible bidders who are waiting to see exactly how open FSG might be open to selling after a tumultuous week.
FSG bought the club for £300m so look set to see a big profit on their investment, but it is understood that they have no intentions of selling right now.
Just last month, chairman Tom Werner said it would take an 'insane' offer for them to cash in, and only recently did FSG as a collective, rather than Liverpool specifically, receive a $700m investment from RedBird Capital Partners.
As was discussed on the earlier this week, while FSG might have broken, or at least significantly damaged, their relationship with fans over the European Super League, whether there are better owners out there remains to be seen.
Ronaldo Unhappy
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2 years ago
Guys please I am the first up rolnado plssaa
2 years ago
MASTER OF SOCCER GOAT
2 years ago
Living legend
2 years ago
True baller
2 years ago
Nice good one
2 years ago
That's so cool and interesting news