
At 46, Ronaldinho Agrees a Return to Italian Football with Third-Tier Ravenna
The Brazilian great signs a contract that mixes marketing flair and the faint possibility of competitive minutes for a Serie C club chasing promotion.
The deal was confirmed across Italian and international media on Saturday: Ronaldinho Gaúcho, 46, has emerged from a decade-long retirement to join Ravenna FC of Italy’s Serie C. The 2002 World Cup winner and 2005 Ballon d’Or recipient will be formally presented in Miami on 23 June, an event designed to leverage his global celebrity as the club prepares for a push towards Serie B. His last official match came in 2015 for Fluminense, but the Brazilian’s signature immediately electrified a club that finished third in its group last season and lost in the promotion playoffs.
The move is as much about the boardroom as the pitch. Owner Ignazio Cipriani, scion of a Venetian hospitality dynasty with deep ties to the United States, personally drove the recruitment. Italian business media note that Cipriani cultivated a friendship with Ronaldinho through their shared Miami circles, and the agreement includes the player taking a minority stake in the club. In statements carried by La Gazzetta dello Sport, Ronaldinho spoke of “dancing on the ball again” and bringing his signature joy to the yellow-and-red shirt, while Cipriani described the signing as “something absolutely extraordinary for our club.”
Conflicting signals from Ravenna’s hierarchy left the extent of the Brazilian’s on-field role deliberately ambiguous. Vice-president Ariedo Braida, once the sporting director who brought him to AC Milan in 2008, initially told Corriere Romagna that Ronaldinho “will do a marketing event with us but will not play for Ravenna in Serie C next season — also because he’s 46.” Hours later, however, Braida told the ANSA news agency that a playing appearance is “not ruled out,” calling the Brazilian “a timeless champion.” Observers in Brazil and the Arab world highlighted the reversal as a careful management of expectations, with the club neither promising nor foreclosing the sight of Ronaldinho’s boot on a third-division ball.
Ronaldinho’s return — however fleeting — is a calculated commercial spectacle. The athlete spent the past weeks at the 2026 World Cup in the United States, where he was photographed attending Brazil’s group match against Haiti. His decision to sign, made public while that tournament is underway, captures the cynosure attention of a global football audience and guarantees Ravenna an international profile unthinkable for a club that last played in Serie B in 2008. Sports business analysts in London point out that even a handful of appearances, or a cameo in a ceremonial friendly, could boost merchandise sales, sponsorship value, and broadcast interest.
The competitive agenda remains the club’s primary focus. Manager Andrea Mandorlini must assemble a squad capable of correcting last season’s playoff heartbreak against Salernitana. Whether Ronaldinho takes the field or merely lends his likeness to the project, the signing has already jolted Ravenna into headlines from Jakarta to São Paulo. The club now awaits the Miami unveiling to learn if the legend is merely a brand ambassador or if, sometime in the autumn, he will indeed emerge from the tunnel and touch the ball for a competitive minute.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 6 languages
Atlantic media frame Ronaldinho's return as a marketing stunt rather than a genuine sporting move, emphasizing uncertainty about whether he will actually play. The tone is measured but skeptical, highlighting his 11-year hiatus and the vague contract details. The story is treated as a media curiosity, not a serious comeback.
Continental European media analyze the Ravenna move as a marketing project orchestrated by president Cipriani and vice-president Braida, framing it in entrepreneurial terms. Ronaldinho's return is described with technical detachment, highlighting commercial aspects and the low likelihood of him playing official matches. The focus is on long-term media value for the club.
Related articles
Brazil's Win Over Haiti Dimmed by Raphinha's Recurring Hamstring Injury
5 languages · 16 outlets
SportReal Madrid issue formal denial over Michael Olise approach
7 languages · 11 outlets
Geopolitics & PoliticsUS Vice President Vance Heads to Swiss Talks on Iran’s Nuclear Programme and Lebanon Truce
5 languages · 14 outlets