As he continues to add supercars to his collection, Cristiano Ronaldo has unveiled his most recent £2 million Ferrari Daytona SP3.
After missing the most recent friendly against Sweden, he has returned to the nation for international duty and participated in the full 90 minutes of Tuesday’s 2-1 setback away in Slovenia.
Before meeting up with his overseas counterparts, he flaunted his brand-new Ferrari at the Four Seasons Hotel while he was still in his native country.
An account named Lisbon Cars shared the video on Instagram, referring to the car as the “newest spaceship” or “CR7.”
The recently purchased vehicle, estimated to be worth €2 million, adds to his collection of pricey vehicles, which was estimated to be worth £18 million overall last year—and it doesn’t include his more recent acquisitions.
With Ferrari’s most potent combustion engine to date, the 39-year-old driver was spotted cruising the streets of Portugal in the new vehicle.
With a top speed of 340 km/h, it produces 697 Nm of torque and 840 horsepower.
Additionally, the car can accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h in 2.85 seconds.
His love of automobiles almost cost him a major injury in 2009 when, just days before Manchester United’s match against Chelsea, he crashed and destroyed a £200,000 Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano. Fortunately, he was not wounded.
Portugal defeated Sweden 5-2 to extend their winning streak to 11 games under manager Roberto Martinez, who did not play. Ronaldo missed Portugal’s match against Sweden.
Martinez was named from the start for their friendly in Ljubljana, Slovenia, with the new manager demonstrating his ability to handle a Portugal team with or without Ronaldo’s influence. Martinez is currently considering his options ahead of Euro 2024.
But midfielders Adam Gnezda Cerin and Timi Max Elsnik’s goals in the second half made sure that the home team prevailed 2-0, ending Portugal’s winning streak.
Portugal will play Turkey, Czechia, and the victor of Tuesday’s final qualifier between Georgia and Greece—which culminated in a major brawl—at the tournament in Germany.