
Cristiano Ronaldo's jaw-dropping earnings revealed as he tops the Forbes sporting rich list once again while Lionel Messi drops down the rankings - but a Brit enters the list in third with a whopping £110m
The 40-year-old striker earned an estimated £206.6million ($275m) last year - an increase of £11.2m from 2023.
Ronaldo has now topped the list for a third consecutive year and a fifth time during his glistening career.
The Portuguese star has reportedly been paid a staggering £177million-a-year salary by his Saudi club Al Nassr since joining from Manchester United in December 2022.
He also has other streams of income through various sponorships and boasts an enormous social media following of 939m.
The five-time Ballon d'Or winner's salary has only ever been dwarfed by one athlete, Floyd Mayweather.
The former world champion boxer earned an astonishing $300m (then £194m) in 2015 and $275m in 2018 (then £205m).
Ronaldo pipped NBA legend Steph Curry, who was ranked second with a £117m ($156m) salary in a season which saw him become the first ever player to hit 4,000 three pointers.
British boxer Tyson Fury came in third on the rich list, with an estimated salary of £109m ($146m) after two fights with Ukraine's Oleksandr Usyk in Riyadh.
The 36-year-old retired for a fifth time after losing his heavyweight title to Usyk via unanimous decision in December, but has been urged to return to the ring.
Ronaldo's long time rival Lionel Messi is ranked at fifth, dropping down from third last year.
The Inter Miami forward took home £101.4m ($135m) last year, with an estimated £56.2m ($75m) in off-field earnings.
The Argentine is paid handsomely for a sponsorship deal to promote Saudi Arabia as a tourist destination.
While Karim Benzema, who plays for Saudi Champions Al-Ittihad, was named as the eight highest paid athlete, raking in £78.2m ($104m).
Basketball stars LeBron James and Kevin Durant make up the rest of list, alongside Dallas Cowboy's quarterback Dak Prescott, and baseballer players Juan Soto and Shohei Ohtani.
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Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
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But now the future looks ever more uncertain. Infantino has now had his moment with Donald Trump on the pitch in New Jersey on Sunday. The Saudis are on board, at least until 2034. The Premier League and other domestic leagues are heading to court with Fifa and the whole calendar seems to be up for grabs. Let us not forget that Infantino has promised a women's Club World Cup too, although what year that will be and where in the calendar it will appear is, as with many of these things, as yet unclear. Will the Club World Cup be bigger than the Champions League eventually, as Maresca thinks may yet be the case? It certainly will need another generous backer to get it through its next iteration – whenever and wherever that might be – but Infantino is unlikely to let it fade away now. He has too much personal capital tied up in it for that. And no-one in his own Fifa family is offering any discouragement.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
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The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
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