At the 1994 World Cup, there was no better player than Romario. The iconic striker was awarded the Golden Ball as the most valuable player of the tournament, having fired Brazil to glory.
That was the crowning moment in an astonishingly good career, which saw him also win Copa America twice with the Selecao, as well as major honours at club level with Vasco da Gama, PSV Eindhoven, Barcelona, and Flamengo. All that is more than enough to make him one of the greatest strikers of all time.
Romario certainly believes that he deserves to be regarded among the very best. In fact, the striker ranked his six best footballers in history, and placed himself in the group.
Speaking to The Guardian in the build-up to the 2026 World Cup, Romario revealed his greatest footballers of all time. He said:
“I consider myself one of the five greatest players of all time. Pele, Maradona, Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, me and Ronaldo. That’s it. I’d give myself an 11 out of 10 as player.”
Most people would likely agree that the likes of Argentine duo Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi deserve to be in the conversation; the same goes for Cristiano Ronaldo. Of course, Brazilian hero Pele is also always in that group of all-time greats.
That just leaves Ronaldo and Romario to make up the six. The legendary duo formed a feared partnership, referred to as the Ro-Ro duo, and fired Brazil to silverware at the 1997 Copa América in Bolivia, where they scored a combined eight goals. Sadly, fitness issues meant the older player didn’t feature at the 1998 World Cup, and he was also left at home in 2002 (although by then he was 35 years of age).
Most fans would rank Ronaldo as the better player, although those who watched Romario in his prime would likely consider him to be at the same elite level as a goalscorer.
Romario Unbothered by ‘Lazy’ Criticism Across His Career
Despite being a true great, Romario did not pass through his career without his fair share of criticism. He was notably not the biggest fan of training and didn’t always appear to put in a lot of effort.
On this topic, he remained as staunch as ever in his own defence. “Romario was lazy,” he said, repeating a regular accusation. “Romario didn’t practise the way many people thought I should train. But I scored goals.
“I was a force to be reckoned with on the pitch and screw the rest. They had to put up with me. Anyone who didn’t like it had to put up with it.”
Self-belief is certainly a huge tool when used correctly in football, and it’s that sort of attitude that perhaps explains why Romario was able to make it right to the top of the sport. With 55 goals in 70 international appearances, Brazil could certainly use a striker of his quality at the 2026 World Cup.