The reporter reported coldly On December 15, the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro will host a retirement farewell match for a former football superstar. Unusually, it was eight years since he last competed.
He was once considered Ronaldo's successor, and Ronaldo will also be present in his farewell match. Sadly, Ronaldo and many of the stars and fans who were invited to the farewell match did not want to witness Adriano completely forgotten by the football world in this way.
That's right, he is the former Inter star Adriano, known as the "Emperor", a fallen star who is willing to be in the wine pond meat forest and has a violent talent, which is enough to be quit for future generations.
Ironically, Adriano, who has not played in eight years, suddenly announced that he will hold his retirement farewell match on December 15 as a complete end to his football career. But what people are paying more attention to now than this farewell match is the ugliness of his hangover on the street on Tiktok - a video of Adriano drunk in November became a hit on the Brazilian TikTok video app, and the former Brazilian superstar was barefoot and drunk in the streets of the slums of Rio de Janeiro in broad daylight, which is really regrettable.
Adriano, 42, made his debut from Flamengo and signed for Inter Milan in the summer of 2001, but only had four seasons at his peak. He returned to Flamengo in 2009 and had only one season of highlights. He then spent a brief spell at Roma, then returned to Brazil, and even went to North America in 2016 to pan for gold, never to set foot in the game again. As early as 2008, when he was loaned to Sao Paulo by Inter, Adriano was exposed to being addicted to alcohol.
Known as a violent center forward in the technical stream, Adriano was named the 32nd of Brazil's top 100 soccer superstars by the British magazine 442 and was featured on the cover of Pro Evolution Soccer games. But Adriano's real career peak was too short, and even after his father's death in 2004, at the age of 22, Adriano had numbed his nerves with alcohol to escape the pain of losing a loved one. Brazilian football expert Vickeri once wrote: "His biggest motivation for playing football is to make his father happy and, of course, to make money." But after his father died and he became a millionaire himself, he lost the meaning of playing. ”
This past November, Adriano, who has been retired for 8 years, published his autobiography "Adriano, My Greatest Fear". In an exclusive interview, he was striking: "I am the most wasteful player in the history of football, and I love the word waste, not only because of the pronunciation, but also because I am obsessed with wasting my life. I like to live a crazy and wasteful life, so I was in the slum where I grew up, shirtless and barefoot, sitting on the side of the road reminiscing about my childhood, listening to songs and dancing with my hair, and sleeping on the floor. Adriano has a mansion in the heart of Rio, but he chose to move back to his childhood slum because it was there that he could really feel happy and what he said was respected.
Adriano's farewell match, tentatively scheduled for December 15, was described by Adriano as "an explanation to himself and to all those who love him for football." ”
At that time, Flamengo and Inter Milan, where he played for, will play between the two teams, and Adriano will play half of the game for both teams. Zico, Júnior, Ze Roberto, Lowe, Cesar, Savio, Denilson, Ronaldo, Materazzi, Córdoba, McConn, Burdisso, Maxwell and many more gathered to witness the most wasteful talent in the history of Brazilian football, and officially end his football career in the regret of the football world.
Adriano can make the most of his talent and become a more successful star who can contribute more to Inter and Brazil. Unfortunately, because of his lack of self-discipline, he has become the most typical negative teaching material in football in the 21st century. Ade's football is shocking enough, and the farce of his life is embarrassing enough. It is true that talent is an important factor in the success of football people, but this 1% of talent also requires 99% of hard work to live up to the talent that the vast majority of people cannot ask for.