Ronaldo was angry about tax problem, says Real boss

Cristiano Ronaldo, second right, and his Portuguese teammates applaud after a 5-1 win over Faroe Islands last week. Photo: Paulo Duarte/AP

Cristiano Ronaldo, second right, and his Portuguese teammates applaud after a 5-1 win over Faroe Islands last week. Photo: Paulo Duarte/AP

Published Sep 8, 2017

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Cristiano Ronaldo, hounded by allegations of tax evasion in Spain, is “delighted” to be staying at Real Madrid, according to club president Florentino Perez, who called claims that the Portuguese striker might leave the country exaggerated.

“As he said a little while back, he’s delighted to be here. No one is better placed than him to say that,” Perez told Cadena Ser radio.

Ronaldo strongly denied having evaded €14.7 million in tax on his image rights when he appeared in court in a preliminary hearing on July 31.

Prosecutors accuse the Real Madrid star of evading tax via a shell company based in the British Virgin Islands and another in Ireland, known for low corporate tax rates.

In addition, they say Ronaldo only declared €11.5m of Spanish-related income from 2011 to 2014, while what he really earned during that time was close to €43m.

They also accuse him of “voluntarily” refusing to include €28.4m in income linked to the sale of his image rights for the 2015 to 2020 period to a Spanish company.

The four-time World Player of the Year, 32, has been heavily critical of the probe into him, leading to rumours that he might seek to quit Spain.

Having fun tonight at the global launch of my first casual fragrance, CR7! 👌🏻⚽ #cr7fragrance #myfragranceyourgame pic.twitter.com/QzCaUHlyOm

— Cristiano Ronaldo (@Cristiano) September 7, 2017

“I don’t know what happened this summer,” Perez said. “A Bola (newspaper) published a story, on what a teammate might have said (about Ronaldo leaving)... In the end, there was nothing.

“As there was not much to talk about this summer, they exaggerated,” Perez said, conceding however that “Cristiano was angry about this tax problem, having been summoned, that’s not nice for anyone”.

Perez added that there was nothing in the case against Ronaldo “that would constitute a crime”.

“He’s hidden nothing and if there’s no hiding, there’s no crime,” he said.

“It’s possible there’s a different interpretation (between Ronaldo’s advisers and tax authorities), and he’s cool and collected on this issue.”

AFP

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