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How Albert Adomah’s audacious stepover left Ronaldinho chasing shadows

Albert Adomah (R), dribbling past Ronaldinho (L) back in 2011 Albert Adomah (R), dribbling past Ronaldinho (L) back in 2011

Most footballers spend a lifetime watching highlights of Ronaldinho, dreaming of what it would be like to share a pitch with the Brazilian magician, let alone humiliate him.

But Albert Adomah didn’t just share a pitch with Ronaldinho. He dared to pull off the unthinkable: he hit him with a stepover and left him behind.

It was 2011, and a then-23-year-old Adomah had just earned his first call-up to the Ghana national team while playing for Bristol City in the Championship.

The debut wasn’t a low-key affair. Ghana were set to face Brazil at Craven Cottage, and the team sheet looked like a FIFA Ultimate Team dream; Ronaldinho, Neymar, Marcelo, Dani Alves, Thiago Silva, Fernandinho, Lucas Leiva, and Alexandre Pato.

For Adomah, a player who had grown up mimicking Ronaldinho’s tricks in street games and cage football, the moment was almost too surreal.

“Before I became a professional footballer, I used to do Ronaldinho skills in street and cage football. So to be on the same pitch as such an iconic figure was a wow moment of my career,” Adomah told SunSport.

But the admiration didn’t stop him from going for it.

Midway through the game, Adomah recall pulling off a trademark stepover, Ronaldinho’s move, and gliding past the Brazil legend, leaving him momentarily chasing shadows.

“During the game, I did his trademark stepover. I’ve got a picture of me going past him. I thought, ‘I’ve just skipped past the most skilful player ever,” he added.

For a few glorious seconds, the kid from South London who grew up imitating Ronaldinho had flipped the script.

But football has a way of restoring balance. Almost immediately, Lucas Leiva, Brazil’s midfield enforcer, came flying in with a crunching tackle that stopped Adomah in his tracks.

“I got brought crashing back down to earth. Lucas, a typical holding midfielder, came steaming in with a sliding tackle,” Adomah recalled.

Brazil would go on to win 1-0, thanks to a strike from Leandro Damião, but Adomah’s surreal debut didn’t end there. After the final whistle, he bagged shirts from Neymar and Pato, souvenirs from a night he’ll never forget.

Twelve years later, Adomah is still playing in the English League Two with Walsall and still has the memory of stepping past Ronaldinho like it was a kickabout back in the cage.

FKA/MA

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