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Photos: Brazil’s Ronaldinho dazzles in charity match for flood victims.

27th May, 2024

Photos: Brazil’s Ronaldinho dazzles in charity match for flood victims

Brazilian former soccer star Ronaldinho reacts after scoring during a charity football match with former football stars and artists at Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro on May 26, 2024. The football match aims to raise money and encourage donations for the victims of the unprecedented floods that have left more than 160 people dead, some 100 missing and left 90 percent of its towns inundated, including Rio Grande do Sul state capital, Porto Alegre.

Brazilian football great Ronaldinho came out of retirement Sunday for a charity match to raise funds for those affected by devastating flooding in the country’s south.

Ronaldinho notched two goals and an assist in the 5-5 tie at the match in Rio de Janeiro’s Maracana stadium.

Ronaldinho, whose full name is Ronaldo de Assis Moreira, is from Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul state, which has been reeling from weeks of unprecedented floods that have killed more than 160 people and left 90 percent of its towns inundated.

A slew of Brazilian football stars got together for Sunday’s charity match, including coach Dorival Junior and former right-back Cafu.

“It’s moving to see all these people coming together to help my people,” Ronaldinho said.

“After this immeasurable tragedy, we see the Brazilian people uniting again,” Junior said.

Ronaldinho, 44, put in his team’s fourth and fifth goals, while Cafu also shone with a goal and an assist.

He left the pitch with 15 minutes on the clock, to a standing ovation.

Women’s stars also took part in the match, including Formiga.

Cities and rural areas alike in Rio Grande do Sul have been hit for weeks by an unprecedented climate disaster of torrential rains and deadly flooding.

More than half a million people have fled their homes, and authorities have been unable to fully assess the extent of the damage.

In state capital Porto Alegre, floodwaters rose again on Thursday amid new rainfall.

The floods mark the region’s fourth extreme weather event in less than a year, a phenomenon scientists say is driven by climate change and also deforestation.



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