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Reuters
Reuters
Health

We are all equally vulnerable, fans say after Ronaldo's positive COVID-19 test

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - UEFA Nations League - League A - Group 3 - France v Portugal - Stade De France, Paris, France - October 11, 2020 Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo reacts REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo

Football fans in Lisbon were unsurprised after Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo tested positive COVID-19, saying it simply showed everyone was at risk of getting infected - and famous athletes were no exception.

Portugal's Football Federation said in a statement on Tuesday the 35-year-old Juventus forward was asymptomatic and would miss Wednesday's UEFA Nations League game against Sweden as he self-isolates.

In Portugal's capital Lisbon, not too far from the football facility where Ronaldo is, fans were not shocked by the news.

Soccer Football - Juventus player Cristiano Ronaldo returns to Italy - Turin Airport - Turin, Italy - October 14, 2020 General view of an air ambulance believed to be carrying Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo after testing positive for COVID-19, arrives at Turin Airport REUTERS/Massimo Pinca

"We are all human beings," said Antonio Rodrigues while standing outside a food market in one of Lisbon's neighbourhoods. "It is not because he is Ronaldo that the dynamic of the situation is different."

Walking with a portable oxygen concentrator, 74-year-old Fernando Marques shared the same view: "Ronaldo is no more than the others - he is a good player, with a lot of money, but we are all the same."

Ronaldo appeared in his side's 0-0 draw away to France in the Nations League on Sunday and last week's goalless draw in a friendly at home to Spain.

Soccer Football - Juventus player Cristiano Ronaldo returns to Italy - Turin Airport - Turin, Italy - October 14, 2020 General view of an ambulance at Turin Airport ahead of Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo returning to Italy after testing positive for COVID-19 REUTERS/Massimo Pinca

Fans also said not being at the match against Sweden was a good opportunity for Portugal's squad to get used to playing without the five-times world player of the year.

"The others have to try to win and play well without him," said Antonio Aleixo, 45. "Sooner or later he will also stop playing."

On Tuesday evening, Portugal's head coach Fernando Santos said "no team can be better without the best player in the world but this team has already demonstrated that collectively it has the capacity to tackle the situation".

Portuguese SIC Television said Ronaldo would travel to the Italian city of Turin, where he lives, on Wednesday afternoon to quarantine there.

(Reporting by Catarina Demony and Miguel Pereira; Editing by Christian Radnedge)

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