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While they say Cristiano is finished, the new lesson he teaches Erling Haaland

Cristiano Ronaldo has a real money advantage in cars with respect to the Manchester City player.

By William Estrella

Cristiano Ronaldo has a real money advantage in cars with respect to the Manchester City player.
Cristiano Ronaldo has a real money advantage in cars with respect to the Manchester City player.

Manchester City defeated Fulham 1-2 as a visitor in the Premier League and is currently the only Premier League leader, beating Mikel Arteta's Arsenal by just one point, with Pep Guardiola's men having two games pending for disputed from previous weeks.

In this way, Erling Haaland revealed Cristiano Ronaldo by far surpassing him in his first season in the Premier League, already reaching 50 goals this year with Manchester City, while CR7 had only scored 6 goals and 7 assists in 40 games played. The Bug also arrived at another point in his career where he was younger and was a winger, not a center forward, at that point in his career.

But removing the football, Erling Haaland and Cristiano Ronaldo have a big difference in terms of their cars, with several million euros difference between the most expensive of their collections, showing that CR7 has a wealth accumulated in years of career to which he still norwegian is nowhere near equal.

The difference in cars, from Haaland and CR7

The most expensive car that Erling Haaland has, today a member of Manchester City in England, is a Rolls Royce Cullinan valued at 300,000 pounds, according to Diario Olé, which is truly luxurious with a 6.75-liter twin-turbo V12 engine. For his part, Cristiano Ronaldo has as the most valued car a Bugatti Voiture Noire, created in 2019 and with a value of 15 million euros, 16-cylinder W quadruple-turbo, a real madness.


William Estrella

William Estrella

I'm a Mexican sports journalist with more than 8 years of experience, especially in digital media. I cover breaking news and investigative articles on current soccer events worldwide. I currently write for El Futbolero USA. Previously, I worked as a radio announcer in my country, covering Mexican soccer.

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