Juventus Sold $60 Million Of Ronaldo Jerseys In 24 Hours

Turin is being gripped by Ronaldo mania. After nine years plying his trade at Real Madrid, the Portuguese superstar has made the switch to Juventus for $129.3 million. Even though he has enjoyed tremendous success over the years, eyebrows were raised at the transfer fee due to Ronaldo’s age of 33. Even he admitted that “players his age usually go to Qatar or China” and he thanked Juventus for giving him an opportunity. As one of the world’s most famous and successful athletes, Ronaldo’s appeal is still tremendously strong and Juventus have gained a significant financial boost after signing him. Shares in the Italian club shot up 40 percent after news of his signing broke while its social media channels acquired 1.5 million new followers in a single day.

Ronaldo is starting to repay his transfer fee even though he hasn’t even kicked a soccer ball yet. In the first 24 hours after Juventus released his kit, 520,000 jerseys were sold, adding up to $62.4 million and nearly half the transfer fee according to Business Insider. As positive as that sounds for the Italian champions, merchandise sales are a little bit more complicated. Soccer clubs usually receive somewhere in the region of 10 to 15 percent of the revenue a kit manufacturer generates from merchandise sales, meaning Juventus will probably make (a still not too shabby) $9 million.

Russia 2018 an Average World Cup in Terms of Goals

With France’s 4-2 win over Croatia, the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia ended in spectacular fashion. While the tournament’s ultimate game, it was the highest-scoring final in more than 50 years, turned out immensely entertaining to the neutral fan, the same cannot be said for all World Cup games, which were often dominated by defensive strength rather than by attacking flair.

With a total of 169 goals scored, among them a record-setting 11 own goals, Russia 2018 was an average World Cup in terms of goals. On average, football fans saw 2.64 goals per game, falling just short of the 2014 tally of 2.67 goals per fixture.

As the following chart illustrates, the scoring average at World Cups has remained relatively steady since Chile 1962 with some smaller ups and downs. In the early years of the World Cup however, high-scoring games such as yesterday’s final were no exception: the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland was the biggest goal feast in history, with an average of 5.38 goals scored per game.